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Paris diary 

Looking back- at the Left’s year one 


At the end of year one of a left-wing 
government, la France profonde 


France 


seems calmer than many of the coin- budget for private (mainly church) 
nientators. The polls suggest that hud schooling increased faster than that 
Frnncoisc Mitterrand been standing for the public sector, 
for president (his week lie would Most of these private .schools arc, 
have been elected, and possibly by a in English terms, aided schools: their 
more comfortable mnTgin than he tenchers are paid, maintenance bills 


the former president Valery Giscnrd The challenge for the Left is to 
d’Estainc. He had seen to it that the refute that highly instrumental view 


Frnncoisc Mitterrand been standing 
for president this week he would 
hove been elected, and possibly by a 
more comfortable mnTgin than he 
was a year ago. 

Yet the professional observers de- 
tect a widespread lack of enthusiasm. 
Their phrases range from disappoint- 
ment to disaster even if Mitterrand 


met by public funds, if they tcuch to 
the state curriculum. So even the 
manifesto prudently added that the 
contracts these schools had made 
with the municipal authorities would 


refute that highly instrumental view 
of the education system, transform- 
ing it into one capable of increasing 
personal autonomy. That brings me 
back to the corpurmi.si point .it the 
beginning of the piece. It was the 
provocative analysis of a highly de- 
tailed historical and sociological stir- 


PmonalMlumn 

Ted Wragg 

The department triumphs 


ii rTrlxiT 





111! 

i^lSniTiifaT 

TTS^Z j 


tailed historical and sociological stir- ami nations and curriculum. Although 
vey which came out in 1978 [L'Fhit one or two powerful committee 
Unselgnant by Pascalc Gruson, pub- members brought it into disrepute a 


himself has doffed the presidential 1 be respected, and the great public 


tnseignant by t'ascaic imisnn, pun- me Miners brought it into disrepute a 
lishcil by Mouton) that corporatism few years ago by silly postures anti 
iti the French teaching profession has daft machinations, the overall record 


■ • .! '■ 
: 1 

’iil 


mantle so easily that he is being 
called a De Oaulie of the Left. Why 
should this be? 

Is it, as the left-wing conspiracy 
theorists believe because the right is 
basically undemocratic? 

Or is it because the Govern- 
ment has failed to convince the 
French, and, in particular, a big 
enough section of tne Left, that in a 
modern democracy a government’s 
actions need to be concerned as 
much with process as product? 

At the height of a recent inlermin- 
isterial row, Prime Minister Pierre 
Mauroy wrote a powerful piece in Le 
Monde about the socialist commit- 
ment to gaitverner autremenl. This. 
gouverniment did not expect its 
ministers to serve in silence os they 
had done for IS years, or to be the 
'’docile Interpreters” of presidential 
policy. Apart from anything else, 
that gave the civil servants a field 
day. Policy options, M Mauroy said, 
needed to be discussed thoroughly, 
and openly rather than imposed out 
of the blue. . 

M Mauroy Is a genial figure. Some 
17-year-olds in his native Lille re- 
cently described him to a journalist 
as being a bonne moules f rites - 
literally a good old dish of mussels 
and chips (one of the local speciali- 


se rvicc would be created without 
destruction or monopolization. M 
Snvary has been talking to all con- 
cerned. 

With (he political climate heating 
up and big demonstrations for and 


been the traditional defence of the 
left against the right's use of the 
education system us merely the pro- 


of the council has, I think, been 
good. 

Some of its projects, like Breuk- 


vider of manpower. To that has been through to Literacy , have made u 
added the petit bourgeois ("beef- massive international impact. Others 
steak") corporatism of recent years. SU ch ns Sleiihousu's Humanities Cur- 
To reread the hook today is to see riculum Project have been more in- 


Thc council's substantial work on 


up and big demonstrations for and To reread the hook loduy is to see riculum Project have been more in- 
acainsl taking place in the Inst couple how enmeshed nre the ideals of the fluciuial on classroom practice than 
or weeks, we wait to see if the French education system, the more nike-up rate alone would suggest. 
Government can put off declaring its sordid aspects of self-interest and of The council's substantial work on 
hand. government interest too. Clearly dis- examinations was largely scuppered 

There has also been the establish- cussion and debate are needed nnd by the universities and a succession 
merit of educational priority zones os M Savory has wisely launched on of dithering ministers, i would guess 
part of a strategy for turning "the that his fashion of gouventer autre- that when, in the 1990s, the popula- 
pedagogy of failure” into "the pedag- ment. That is, of course, the classic tion of lR-year-olds falls, universities 
ogy of success” and M Snvary has result of alternating political power, will suddenly ncquire an appetite for 
recently been given a report which . It_brings new people to power. At four year degree courses, tnus reliev- 


government interest too. Clearly dis- examinations wus largely scuppered 
cussion and debate are needed nnd by the universities and a succession 
M Savnry has wisely launched on of dithering ministers, i would guess 
that his fashion of gouventer autre - that when, in the 1990s, the popula- 


ogy of success” and M Snvary has 
recently been given a report which 


Too life-like for comfort 

45sr tteettv/WeeJ* ’ll I ^Cct OYtc/tf afire !| T Jfrcdf-atr. 

m ~] k 1 ■ ‘ 


#MXA MJptuV MnMi tUt 
IM* emu 

M uV a> Ml «anU -ft 


IP ^ ■ 




ties). He is committed to encourag- 
ing debate: he has had a lot of 
experience in adult education where 
he helped to establish something like 
the WEA, The discussion recipe has 
worked there. It has worked in the 
socialist party too. 

. But party leaders, and Indirectly 
Mitterrand himself, have seen such 
an approach as amateur. 

Whether or not it is connected, it 
Is obvious that, the . .Government has 
not had wholehearted support for 


k*t«Mr rio 


fanti .tx 

xssur 


i tin uiui Maiiriw Mi 
(dinu u*. n«*uor«iu*iit 






Le Monde de 1‘Education has been giving space to one of Franco's best Illustrators, 


Claude Lapointe, in recent months! the briefto portray teachers, the taught and 

. .their parents.' The drawings are now published by GaUimard ( Portraits , . 1 *■?.*. however, entl nil spccmuiion ncw su b.comm!ttees. 

Indirectly tPenseignarUs, d’ensetgnds ei d'autns). They give the (feel of school Ufo as we live It. hbout the future of the two new-stylo established. The'Teach Wo#; < 

eon such I instantly discovered some familiar figures among the teachers and some that slimmcd-down Schools Council . 7-|.J ss children ■ Good '■) 

were too ltfc-llke for comfort among the pupils, Including the bright Ideas fellow hnHl»»« for curriculum nnd exuminn- 


ing pressure on sixth form curricula 
and opening the door for something 
like the N and F proposals. 

The press was full of reports nboul 
these changes being a victory for 
someone called Ulrich, wno ( 
thought 1 remembered as a peasant 
in William Tell, but who turns out to 
be a senior DES official keen for the 
department's civil servants to take 
more control. The thought that curri- 
culum development may be . in the 
hands of the writers Of The utterly 
banal, but fortunately forgotten. 
Framework for the Curriculum docu- 
ment of a couple of years ngo, chills 
Ihe Wood. Friend Ulrich, apparently. 
In his evidence to the Trenaman re- 
view of the Schools Council, de- 
scribed John Mann, the council's 
present secretory, as too concerned 
with touchers’ interests nnd "plainly 
hostile to the department”: in oilier 
words, a really good bloke. 

1 coil, however, end all speculation 


went to himself, but he will be 
to .sing press statements on wJ 
sion. This will get curriculum pro- 
jects excellent publicity, some of k ' 
world-wide, us his latest single Tm 
in the mood for integrated science b 
the middle school, yeah man” is to 
he Britain's entry in the next Eurovi- 
sion Song contest. 

Muny people have said that the 
key appointment in the new-siyfe y- 
council will be the post of secreting - ' 
so I checked this one very cu^My. 
The new secretary will be Mn Erne 
Ramsbollom. She is currently a. 
•secretary at the DES, and pnwle 
who know her say that , both fer 
shorthand and typing are pretty 
sound. * ' 

In charge of physical education 
projects will be Mr Michael Had- 
tinc. It is not commonly realized thu 
Big Mike is one of the fittest men In 
the House of Commons. Heim 
enormous biceps from swinging tlx 
mace nround his head dunng dc- , 
bates, and is a sprinter of intenp*. 


having to run away from the probin' 
of inner cities and from local goto* 
ment officials demanding a Jiigjlb * 


rate support grant. < • 

. ..The key committee responsible Em 
research into the curriculum will be 
chaired by Mrs Mary Whitehouse. ■ 
This is a particularly good appoW- 
ment because Mary has tremendous . 
experience of public opinion surveys. ; 
ft is true that her critics have sow 
times uccused her of asking loaded ; 
questions like "Do you think there ti 
too much sex and violence on t«w 
sion and what are you going to « 
about il7" but I personally tfflnk she * 
will do a grand job for curriculum 
research. 


Oxbridge dons 
discuss plans to 
introduce fairer 
^missions policy 

by Biddy Passmore ** 

irooirpveisial reform of the Oxford the outside world that the results nf 

fi&M be "' *«' 

■i a famnridfie work! ns oartv is l .paginations could ever be a 

;r P %Tx k ,'W e of 

talk .1 other ways of making it and ! d,la > !™P >r 

isSoSRV & ci( " r h j° rm h™ “ d sysPis 

■ exam DC,ore A levels. f orce( j to be over-cautious in their 
(Word and Cambridge have come choice. 

ibr lucreasing criticism for the sir Peter concluded that both uni- 
orofmilionBtely high number of versifies would be wise to change 
feicboolpupils they admit. State their admissions methods. But Se 
ud pupils are thought to be at a warned that universities were deeblv 
because they are nor- conservative institutions, with con- 
- ° a S 'i , entrance stitutions so complicated and power 
S ttc A ** . . sa ftagmented that it was not easy to 

At the I n\ went (n ni-j.ee ikm ai.ki..» . 1 ..-.. ■ . 



S olides which symbolize the aspira- 
ons that it was expressing (his time 
last years like making France 
"fraternal in its concern for social 
justice and dignity, responsible in Its 


i instantly discovered some ramiuor figures among me teachers and some tluit »unm«i-uu»n , awwwn v*'"'*-* 1 ; no c 'luss Children 
were loo life-like for comfort among the pupils. Including the bright Ideas fellow bodies for curriculum and exuminn- 8 n e fcrencc sub-i 
who can do things his mateB really appreciate like making electronic gadgotry for || onSi Although the . Seyretory of ( .| 1 ..| rt ,,i i w ii ur barh 

discos (or bourns m wo know them) but risks having to repent tho school year. Stutc is not expected to hmko mi Hilihv Left- 

There is also tho welcome little foreigner who has the good taste to speak perfect announcement until Inter this year, I * v-, -k.Ljmn'i It t ere- - will 
French. And there are the girls who pursue my adolescent son, can now disclose the most sonsution- r 'olonel Sir 11 

You’ve guessed it. I am, of course, tho mother hen. pi educational scoop of the decudc: I J • » p-fronch-l 

have obtained n top secret paper rii™. 

from tho DES which scls out every 


,ests that the reform of teacher the end of year one of left-wing 


INK V- 111.13 UllWim 1 '“-, 

and Deference sub-committee wf je . 
chaired by Burbarh Cfrtlwd| 

Stop- FiUhy Left-wing , InAJ^ ; 

Kub-commlttee-wifi . 

by Colonel Sir HenfV 'Shw* , . 
Buggers" Frrench-Fforbes-SingkW 
ii no-nonsense Crimean War vetert 
who. I believe, has n couple of lew. . 



t- \V'y” 
'i'r •• . 
&’} 3 yV : 

lll- ; 

ffc ’ ' i| . • 


concern to create n citizenry ready to trdimng is the key. j government, wo may be waiting for 

hike decisions . Many members of Jn Freitdh ternis, it is quite revolu- practical achievements. But the air Is 
the Socialist Party now see dcccntra- Uonary. It proposes the end of the still fresh In the corridors of power, 
lizfitlon ns misplaced, a way of lasing present differentiated system in . From tho stratosphere to the gross- 
power after inking 23 years to gnin which the high status lycee teachers roots - n personal PS . . . I've 
U. Some measures jiave run .Jnjto get least tmininB, lowest teaching always thouaht that French sciiools 
trouble with the trade unions* who .. loads and' highest tr "' n "-- — — »-*- - — 


the end of year one of left-wing Inst detail. * ure J. fln , m |dmightcra. mb !* 

government, wo may be waiting for First, I can assure you, there is no tl J* , * Jale 0 n sdiool matlHif*, 
practical achievements. But the air Is need to feel anxious that tlw new P r ®, y “ p ? u r.Lnme m ha, 
still fresh In the corridors of power, councils will be biased, simply be- pinully, thu Gavcrnn^^,, . 

From the stratosphere to the grass* cause they are to be Government elded that tne new c » ^ 

roots - n personal PS . . . I've nomlnntcu. Indeed, although there Council should be W ,. n»^ 

always thought that French sciiools are no teachers on them, they repre- lined, so It will consi ^ 

were onto a wickedly effective trick sent a good balanced cross-section of Bayun -and nls uu - re& j|y 

in making parents pay for school people Interested in education. Auntie Ethel, ali ol .™tng v 
stationery, not ns a money-saving dc- Tno chairman of the new C.urricu- keen on regular spelling — __ 


From the stratosphere to the grass* cause they are to be Government 
ots - n personal PS . . . I've nomlnntcu. indeed, although there 


Trouble with the trade unions* who .. loads and' highest pay, less favour- were onto a wickedly effective trick sent a good balanced cross-section of Boy 
have -seen, as the French put it, /able treatment, being accorded to in making parents pay for school people interested In education. Aun 
i "their baeis(cak” threatened., :. each of the four inferior categories stationery, not ns a money-saving dc- Tno chairman of the new Curricu- kcer 
:The; education world is not Ini- down to primary teachers at. the bot- vice but as an extra disciplinary tool 
,muhfi’.;Tlie unions have sabotaged an tom. Universities would be rcsporisl- for the teacher (“You mean to say ^ •• , 

attempt fo decentraHze the admlnis- bio fpr coordinating tralnlngi Periods that you: have forgotten to get a new [ ES t^rOSSWOrCI lNO 5U 
■tratlon of education to the level of ; of practical . experience .would be- Cxerdse book? Two mnrks off ypur 


Council should be spiau nna ngj.-. 
lined, so it will consist .°f- 
Boysun .nd his _U»>c | e Bert 


unyMin hum »*■» »*nv 

Auntie Ethel, all of whom ore re«Hf . . 
keen on regular spellin g tests. 


.mune/The unions have sabotaged ah tom. Universities would be responsl- 
-attCmpt tp decentralize the aamlnis- bio fqr coordinating trainlngi Periods 
tratlon or education To the level of .; of practical experience , would be- 


by Rufus 


the ; dtparlepxent. One consequence- come conipulsoty.’ * 

for them would have been to break The umversUIes debate similarly 


for them would have been to break 
up the powerful, Federation de 
Education Nationals which groups 


begs English parallels Much of the 
recent debate, nas centred on how to : 


result in . the. next test.") 

. Now comeS news of a new uSe for. 
parental, francs. ,, we got a request 
trom , the primary school the other 
day asking for contributions to a 


the major education unions; They, make them, more autonomous and : day asking for contributions to a 
have. also, managed to snuff out a diverse. One consfeteot suggestion. Is' fund for the little things which help 
debate about what is wrong with the for a buffer body between the uni- tq make school life nicer: for out- 

IiVenAh ' C^fl/V\i 1 Thrni uAreiHee : Avvrfl tlkA DnirarnNlAnf.. .Iliet ' - 



4 b#: id j 

.1 !*• Hi-' 


Im 

m 


:;;.WithoiU- pushing^ tlhe analogy - too - .tiherjs JWas; - elWiys ; X Iphger-^gjtted 1 _ _ 

; ftir, there ate certainly sdtqe echoes.:, Vlpw .thWt l- sometime'. senae wuen T: sghbQl iritrance 1 
TTieThptniest probloni that- -Mitter-; read the Engljsh presi on equchtioi}. fdssor BrmntHb 
. rafrdV. Minister of Education,-. M' No question of bis government gqing givfci'them the r 

* k CauaW' Inkarltc ic'tuhaf frt Ha • H&rXi nh rnfilvSrAhfmehfff krnAnllvtft Tnr ■ An.tUta- : ‘ i 




Down . 

I WIihi onilnlwy tfL,,. 

3 Ihbso who Uo 
often 1WP m ** n L 
nnlox (4..V5J • 

■4 Gcnnan sun w . 

U'j" ^., a 
. a fio pSt 

■ wont ««>« U P ■ . 

Tsffl^nSS writ^ 

(ft Chic side of 01*^?- :■ 

jn A^nrtuilwr sign W' : ; ::I 


■ . A —....viu tm bwui>Jiu.nicu tuiu puwer 

5 rrc A ? v f s * . . sa fragmented that it was not easy to 
« /w went to press this achieve change evep'if it won general 
m, admissions tutors at Oxford support. A Royal Commission was 
Wf'JjS 10 ihe possibil- therefore necessary to solve this and 
r « .making all candidates sit a other problems. 

a «T^i? f ^rtli P ^«!i e iU The dif{icullies Sir Peter referred 
sixth form" Allnwnn!^! t0 have bccn flm P*y demonstrated by 

? forUm who Jhn ? ,e two universities' attempts at re- 
did briH^ntlv in ihlfir a C i cx ^ m form. Time and again; inter-collegl- 

ate disagreement ifos buried them^ 

this |£| titeWu" Tw0 y ears a «°- admissions 
mnwDuld jl lm J "JL 0 ^ *t e tu t°rs ot Oxford started discussing 

SKIS i, 1’ W f r Cand, ‘ P ,a "s to. move the entrance exam 
"rAkviu R, fi e „ r J Bf0rc ? r te current slot in November/ 

JSSt - -MM rin Dccember ( the “Michaelmas" Term) 

10 *°ok at to the Easter ("Hilary" Term). 

wi in the numEer of papers so S up portcraof ll|0 ^cheme.sald Uiaf- 
pre-A level candldntJe ni dre exarti - Much would require less 
of i dlsadvaniace HrC 0 wr ' lton w °rk than at present - would 
* Point on which' i hnr^ provide a “dry run'* for A levels, 

Abroad agreement wi^ilmT^hc * ,lirmonizc botler with ‘he admissions 
eZneo ewm Z u d l«„i ^ ,om °P cratcd b V ‘he Universities 
1? n SnUll^vinr,^?^ Central Council on Admissions 
dSned "o show wlm fnmo (1JCCA), nnd end the distinction be- 
achieved" S ‘wocn pre- nnd post-A level candi- 
Sdo3.“wh mwiwnm ! ,a,cs - ,,Wc would have had a 
(0 assess is noipn int » tSS homogeneous academic Uj)it..coming 

“• ojitJoniirtonBIs week. 

Wn subjects; such — H,lt 7‘ 1 i lc u hQ|1,e s ®PP?, ne , nts 

*■ . r . . agreed that the proposed , timing 

iMbtect Of Oxbridge entrance w ? u,d , P ]a f° added burdens on 
•wught to the fore attain last SL 'h»ols and candidates, who would 
TOO Sir Peter Swlnnerton. already be sitting mock A levels, and 
“‘tier of St Catharine's Col- thnl fnl,urc t0 B el an Oxford place at 
fridge, called for a Royal th at stage of Ihe year might damage 
to on the two universities pupils' performance In A levels. 

4 ^missions procedure as a At Cambridge, a working party of 
rpwnl. admissions tutors first proposed 

Mi|t the annual conference switching tho exnm tq the summer 
Jtorimg Schools Association l ? rm 10 coinride with A levels and 
* Rochferd, Sir Peter said it ‘hen, when that was turned down, 
i&ywy difficult to convince Continued page 3 



A picture that may not now b^IpeateiniHBritaln^^ 

ichoob^ayr^ uuAI^^ Rome month - 


Parents group set to join borough committee 

by Sarah Beyliss " 


A Labour-controlled council is pre- 
paring to coopt a group of parent 
representatives with full voting rights 
on to its education committee. The 
move may be one of the first of its 
kind. 

The Labour group on Newfaam 
borough council in East London 


made the commitment to 
its manifesto for the loct 


Brents In 
elections 


; argutg‘ .the Jaw 


Hi i 



■ Books: Reviews' oF dlofiobaries, ; 
.allas^ and fincydopedias - - I 


France 
Act Ul 


Across •• 

, ' J PCughl; being 

«leoiofea rwlundam (R) 

■ S 1- ftirn to a I rifle <4) ■ 
■f,9 Conic tlui wlih ijic 
^dd huy« a drink 

TO Is paifcni .- under 
-• . adversiiy (7) .- •* 
iU A driving examiner. 

dow . . 

• 13 Mead, hrancli (6) ' 


indes of Jules Feny t Initiator ofr mitorFwft* as^ ; >6h>| WdiKhtoiftn a kcepticil! ' . P ® Km W 

ice's. firsL compulsory . EdudariotF jhe i pre^tvatipn-.of . Educational; look’a^ the SeW “ifort-^st’^Siian 1 ' 4 fi ***?!! rou,Hl und 


17 It decide* uhoW union 

20 i^iflg t7: hut wide- 
spread ugrcejnent I") 

21 A gUl in. • dhlrc** 

. Uiighf hy Lohengrin 

.ii Ixilor of. appolnimbru 

2} Nuls ' epa: tirorid ll» ■ 
; thorn, qiid hull* (K) 


n.i.uiiu. In UtilfflE 


Solullon [ |0 ^7^, r 



IQ na 



earner this month. Having returned 
to power with a large majority, the 
goup Is now pledged to pursue the 

Mr Fted Dance, newly elected 
chairman of education, said this 
Week: “1 believe the education of 
children is a partnership between the 
local authority, and fee parents, it's 
time we involved them as members- 
of the committee’." The borough was 


Call for alarms 

Local education authorities may have 
to consider supplying teachers with 
alarms to help them summon support 


one of the first Iu the country to 
have parents on its school govern ina 
bodies, he added. 

However. Mr Dance admitted that 
(he method for selection was tricky 
and indeed, had not been decided. It 
was important for representatives to 
have a strong interest in education 
and the parents' interest uppermost 
in (heir minds,, rather than another 
interest; 

School-based elections might have 
to be held for the posts, although the 
size of that undertaking_was rather 
"horrifying”, he Said, The council 
was anxious to avoid being accused 
of putting its own supporters on the 
committee. 

Three new places for parents were- 
likely to occur, bringing the total 
membership to; 40 r .Currently there 
are 27 .elected .councillors, .pips 10 

Television and 
teenagers 26 


coopted members including teacher 
representatives, two from the local 
trades council and chamber of com- 
people chosen for 
their knowledge ana interest in 
education. 

The increased numbers on a com- 
mittee requires the approval of the 
Education Secretary. To avoid delay, 
Newham may appoint parents to the 
three seats currently available. 

Mrs Joan Sallis, a long-time cam- 

RSSELlJ par * nts ’ 2* hta » wdcamed 

the Newham move this week, saying 
the parents would see committee 

Fnt^decWon-nSng”* **■ *” 

The Newham Labour manifesto 
also promised to involve parents in ■ ' 
its renew of education in the light of 
falling rolls, lyith each school riorrdhat- 
Ing an observer at oortunlttee meetings. 


If they are assaulted, a teachers’ lead- 
er said this week. 

Mr Brian Jones, London 
member or the National Association 
of Schoohnaaters/Unlpn of Women 
Teachers, Has floated the Idea of Per- 
sonal alarms for teacher In ,( high 
risk” areas foUowing the Suzanne 
Aittock cose. 

Miss Puttock is the 31-year-old to- 
ner London tc««her who was allegM 
to have been told by « maght rate Uwt 
she could expect to be hit; about six or 
seven limes during her career* 


Mr. Jones also Mid the police snoura 
initiate prosecutions to cases where 
teachers had been assaulted. 


Pay - arbitrators 
meet , >'3 ' 

Lecturer cleared 
by race row 
inquiry 5 

The conservative 
curriculum ' 23 


Encyclopedias, 
dictionaries and 
atlases 41-48 

Comment . 2 

Platform; 4 

School to work 17 

Overseas news 18,19 


Letters 20,21 

Talkback 22 ' 

Features 23-25 

Review 26 

Arts 1 . 27,28 

Books ' 29-31 

Resources .32 

Media -33 

Eridpages ; 34,35 

Aristides, Personal ' : : 
Column and, Crossword 
! / ’ 88 . 

Classified : 36 


y:'".-. 

: J'"'- 

: j i. V- ■ 


m 

' : J 'i* '<' B 

>f :’v 

■ 

'•rm 

:>j m 

, hSJifiSi 







!' i i ! i 


L TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


[TfMEsT PAST I 


ivy 


J - : ! >: 


THWrfiMEsimA 


Scales out of step with inflation, say teachers' leaders 

"whatnl Pay claim goes to arbitration 


KM" 


EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 

VO Box 7. 2(H) CJrav’s Inn Road. London Wl’IX KHZ. Tel 0I-K.T7 123-1 


What price 
the mess 
of pottage? 


Time for an Oxbridge Commission? 


Wthin the next few w wks , Q l^ » — 


! .1 } 


v ■ i 
, • S :•> 1 


■ V 


l> : ■ •• : 


Few topics rouse so much indignation in 
the columns of The TES as the Oxbridge 
admissions procedures, From time to 
time a head will write about the difficulties 
encountered in getting outstanding pupils into 
the ancient universities. Pupils who have the 
ability to do outstandingly well in A levels fail to 
commend themselves to admissions tutors. There 
is a strong suspicion that entry is too dependent 
on specialist preparation which, almost by defini- 
tion, the run-of-the-mill comprehensive school 
cannot provide. And as, again by definition, most 
pupils at any time are going to be in run-of-the- 
mill schools, it is clearly not satisfactory (hat 
entry to the universities with the highest concen- 
tration of scholarship and academic talent should 
be systematically skewed in favour of sixth- 
formers from a limited number of schools, a 
disproportionate number of them in the indepen- 
dent sector. 

This surfaced recently in the episode re- 
ported by Dr Harry Judge in an article in The 
Times. He quoted Mr John Cooper, the direc- 
tor of education for Hounslow, who had told 
him: “I hope no youngsters in my area will go 
there'* - meaning Oxford - “that would simply 
preserve a rotten system by sucking them In”. 
Mr Cooper was simply expressing in extreme 
form, a sentiment quite widely held among 
those connected with the maintained schools - 
namely, that schools which set too much store 
on Oxbridge and the prestige which goes with 
it, are likely to be led astray and to neglect 
their responsibilities to many other students. , 

In truth, it Is a more serious problem for 
Oxbridge than for the rest of the educational 
system. Except, of course, that it embodies an 





ent 


mm . : 


■ l 


r Jj:;i Heading for 
integration 

The Advisory Centre for Education and the 
•'! ■ ; Spaces Society got together to run a confor- 

' ;■ : | ■ ’ enco bn “Working towards Integration" (page 

:;J! . 10). Hot only was It pocked to .overflowing. 

■ 1 ‘j-i'j :> ' ' ■ wEm. tyeudlfi and teachers keen to swop good 

i * • II • practice rind bad experience, but it could Tinvo 



i'l i}; 

m 

' .V, -R?-* 

iMap. 

j.' 

■y i !• 


; been run a second lime on the overeubscrlp- 
'.flon list. . . ■ ••• 

. What was. most remarkable about this was 
tho.lcap In thinking which seemS ,tb havc taken 
‘^labejeven In the past few months. Integration 
tended to be an emotional word which you 
. were . either for or against; it was ail too easy 
to rbilst change behind “we can’t . integrate 
' becaiiso ..> ." attitudes! Now the realization 
• that integration is a continuing process is gain- 
ing ground fast, as experience builds, and 
te adhere -come to believe that they can do It, 


element of injustice which is - or ought to he - 
everybody's concern and particularly that of 
the politicians. This came up last week in Sir 
Peter Swinncrton-Dycr's address to the Board- 
ing Schools Association (page 1). Sir Peter, 
one of a covey of academics active in the 
Social Democratic Party's education and train- 
ing working party, seized on this question of 
Oxbridge admissions as the only serious point 
about the future of independent education us it 
might affect SDP education policy. He noted 
the way in which an “unsymmetrical” entry 
system had developed, with one group app- 
lying in the fourth term of the sixth form 
(mainly from the maintained schools) and 
another taking (he entrance examination in the 
seventh term (mainly from independent 
schools). He noted also the ad hoc arrange- 
ments being made by a number of Oxford 
Colleges linked with particular comprehensive 
schools and nrcas - “schemes remarkably re- 
miniscent of the tied scholarships which wc 
were all denouncing a decade ago". 

He was so pessimistic about the ability of 
cumbersome academic democracies like Ox- 
ford and Cambridge to reform themselves that 
he felt constrained to advocate another Royal 
Commission on the ancient universities in the 
series which have been needed every SO years 
or so over the past ISO years. And while it is 
every amateur politician's instinct to reach for 
a Royal Commission when he cannot think 
what to do, it could be that the time is coming 
when no outside examination is needed, and 
the admissions tangle might provide the way 
into Oxbridge*s larger debates. 

The fact is, however, jhat If you qull at this 


In essence, what Lord Rothschild says is 
thnt very little -- about 120m - is being spent In 
1982-82 by the Social Science Research Coun- 
cil, having regard to the importance of the 
aspects of national life with which it Is con- 
cerned. 

Critics of the SSRC (while often sceptical 
about social science and social research) 
assume that support for theso activities can 
easily be paid for by other agencies. This is. 
not so, Lord Rothschild says, and anyway, if it 
could, tiicre is a grant deal to bo said for 
channeling money through an independent 
public body. Since social science is often con- 
cerned with the same questions as social poli- 
cy, independence meuns some protection 
against the political pressures epitomized by 
Sir Keith’s own deep-rooted hostility to sociol- 
ogy and ail its works. Lord Rothschild’s more 
measured conclusion is that governments have 
not made such an unblemished success of 
things hr to deserve immunity from criticism, 
itiformed criticism in many areas depends on 
continued, independent research. Common 
sense is not' enough. 

Not,- of course, that the SSRC is perfect or 
unable to benefit by studying the report’s 
recommendations in detail. But the conclusion 
is clear: the council's money should be cut no 


V : ordinary schbpls, commissioned by the XfcES : i ft - dents;, whom the > SSRC will continue . ta sup- 
to; Sectlori 10 (the sepqhd yblufne of; gkort^r IfJ'tfic'’ C^iwxi^ln^ni- ; follows. : £ord Roth*. 
falegratidn lt}:‘Ac(lQn , - iS Out : this! i tIia wlinu 


When Sir Keith Joseph summoned Lord Roth- 
schild to ;do ^ haichot . job ,on the ' Social 
Science Research Council, He picked-; flip:; 
wrong man (front hfe point of view) ,pr, father, 
the right, man tq p.fqrim^ k Short, ,qdfdf,.jMd 
and rioptrincinfe dofdo^ dr.the-tjoi^^l^aad' of 
public support .fpfr social . science. - : '>v 


thread, the whole tapestry is liable to unravel. 
Questions about Oxbridge admissions raise the 
whole complicated set of relationships between 
the colleges and (lie university. But it would 
he necessary also to consider the role of elite 


for the funding of education. Rumour^- taSE* ^ is cht 
the proposals will have MmethlnaforZ^ Dt Thomas Johnston, vice-dif 
- back benchers interested in rednefo! i Hedol*W«tt University. 
Opposition MPs hankerine for mm! , la their submission to the r 
l)!'s Lying recover : 
unions eager to negotiate stfS* “if iid the Govt 

!i! L n r ct u La , tl0n officers “ding m rftfwkls money from individ 
non for their budgets; even iteTh-ST Sktaibe effect could be “ 
balling- rolls and financial coiuininH b, fenanv of them, 


by Richard Garner 

SKErtBBiisa a. — ifsasKi 

.f £i war this year’s pay claim f eac heHn the « 8 m d - the ?SS« b ! r - of ® m P |o yees to whom it 

Etet a three-strong arbitration nrv . nn«iSSf ,m 88 lh 5 p t nm ' p 5 U ? 8 r ,s an increase of 3.5 per cent 

iff c5 ? urce md have md 4 ' 5 per ««* »n the payoilr 

^ panel, whose decision is bind- P a 8 d whh \bJllVX J* 81 * . * when re ^ eaJed « n Tfie TES last week, 
JfflEoth sides, is being chaired by J™ id J 5 ^!f ke C / U L u “ the t * achei ? panel's submission press- 

DfThomas Johnston, vice-chancellor decoratfon a?d ^.S^ bU \ dmgS 9*?^ “ lhe 1,0101 l t? 1 ther ® ^ould be 

JS-Watt University. of bonks p ^ ovisIoQ P e J?T ent ®®chinery set up to col- 

iSr submission to the hearing, „„J anc T e <l‘«P*nent, wet the necessary information to re- 


Hotot-Wan University. of u‘ u ‘^ u ji, mn |>* P r . ovislon 

Sr submission to the hearing, teaching if n w m k equ,pD ? nt ' 
(local authorities say that if the on ra^ 50 

JS goes above the 4 per cent on ' rather than numbers of teachers. 


11 m dt/UTW HIV -r pvi win rp, , — — - 

sn it and the Government * h< 6 sobmisston goes on to warn t0 £* 

Maids money from individual au- J aat . Uie . restnctive” attitude of i O I? e / 5F“ m,s |j 0n adds that since the 
mq the effect could be “severe” f5 ache , rs t low wds voluntary duties cle 8S Commission report on 
i iMQV of them. has foistrated sayings, particularly teachers those on the maximum 

tv? add: "To put it at its sim- n additional staff for superviiing sca ' e two, considered to be about 
mi L every £l of expenditure P u pds at lunchtime and other clerical the average for the profession, have 
mnt related expenditure an ^ anc, Hary duties”. seen their pay rise by 23.1 per cent 

net, Se authority itself will have Many groups of employees have p I? ce5 aave 49.9 per 

^ £ 2 , the bulk of which will been willing to accept “modest (even EEEi and P a V generally by 59.9 per 
k to come from ratepayers.” zero)" pay Increases in order to stay .. , . . u 

The authorities also warn that a 'n employment during the recession. a „ iiIS es * U * era wou,d . need 

sf.aSSE'B-S 

^w'(OLKnt?y aMQ.T per cent ^ 

Oxford dons vote against motion on prodigies 

Hi prodigies should not be barred 1>e move to introduce a lower age Tuesday evening, they were trying to 
■i entering Oxford University be- imit arose from the case of Ruth collect the neressary 50 signatures 
W ° f 6 - ‘he dons decided Lawrence, the 10-year-old Yorkshire At the meeting the chlefopponent 
liar first vote on the issue this schoolgirl who won an open scho- of an age bar wu Miss RacbuTdck- 
(d. • larship to St Hugh’s College last ett, pnnapai of St Hugh's. She 

A1 1 poorly attended meeting of year. But even if the change had argued that admissions to Oxford 


the teachers' panel's submission press- 
es the point that there should be 
permanent machinery set up to col- 
lect the necessary information to re- 
view teachere’ pay levels and com- 
pare them with workers in other sec- 


teachers towards voluntary 
“has frustrated savings, pflri 


institutions within un elite system of higher tightened the screws on l.e.a.s thnxri ^Tlbe? add: “To put it at its sim- 
cduention generally. In the post -Bobbins ex- ’^ ,s - The reorganization of 1974 led h far every £1 of expenditure 


punsion the myth that u degree is a degree is a 
degree has become more and more difficult to 
maintain. The idea has been fostered (by no 
one more than by Oxford and Cum bridge) that 
some universities and departments arc interna- 
tional centres of excellence, while others arc 
humble institutions of a more domestic nature. 
The latest round of finunciul cuts has empha- 
sized the idea of separate divisions within the 
university league, with u continuing competi- 
tion for promotion and relegation. Is it now 
time to look seriously at the long-term implica- 
tions of these developments, starting with the 
affairs of the oldest and grandest of the clubs 
in the first division ana the influence they 
exert on other institutions? 

Such an inquiry would soon raise questions 
of a much more fundamental kind which have 
remained unanswered since the time of Rob- 
bins. A Royal Commission on Oxford and 
Cambridge would only mBke sense if it were 
treated within a framework of reform which 
extended to the bridging or the binary divide 
and a review of sixth form curriculum and 
examinations. Which, of course, explains once 
Hgaln the seductive tippcnl of Koyul Commis- 
sions as a means of wrapping up one conten- 
tious question in unothcr, nnd committing 
them to a comfortublc seven-year oblivion in 
the keeping of a distinguished committee. 



Places to new local government systuaB 
decision -taking. “Corporate Manage: 
neutral term for a sensible process ol wdi 
together - acquired a significance out ofn 
ortion to its simple meaning. Sensibly spS 
the “new” approach helped authorities!^ 
with resource problems and the flood rfi 
industrial legislation. Misinterpreted ml i 
applied it weakened public and prtrfga 
support for local government itself, . 

Central government's own reaction k 
been largely unhelpful. Successive p>. 
me ms of different colours have paid fysri 
to the idea of freeing local government H 
general drift has been towards central 
In addition, both major parties rupati 
the growing pressures for partkipatioa < 
involvement by promising legislation to ifei 
then parental rights and bolster fad* 
choice. This has placed burdens cm to 
over-burdened local adminisiraton rtfli 
being asked by other arms of goveatiri 
reduce munpower and administrative ©fc 
Against this background it is not serpri 
that proposals from DES to “simplify, i 
even "protect" the financing of the edit# 
service should meet welcoming responsuh 
inside the service. But how much 
protection would really exist? 

Local authorities might be free. |o v 
! more and the pressures of “convergew 
wards new turgets might lend the more ui 
to raise tqwnding levels. But "coswp 
suggests movement both ways - 
as up. Central government, having gj 
targets and penalties for local goveraitw* 
whole, would apply thorn - sooner or IIW , 
an education block grant. . ■ • 

To the extent that freedom remained a 
system, disparities would remain, too^< 
confusion about responsibilities, whKb . 
our present arrangements, would now 
tinuu 1ml could be redoubled by tnC 
of two separate sets of grant arrange ' 

It will be argued that the 


ml, ihe authority itself will pave 
£2, the bulk of which will 
lit to come from ratepayers." 
ijie authorities also warn that a 
m pay increase for teachers who 


i rwr 561 ? 06 university-wide 


echoes 


XT^v It Will be argued thul 

IN 0 need these changes is to ensure n 

to 1 . i . on education which reflects the 

iPPiSISltC 1 ’ intentions of the Oovcrnmenl of 

lCgldiaiC practice, a system on these lines 

Dr Matthew Ginsberg was well-meaning but mix- the central government with 
guided in his attempt to persuadu Oxford controlling Ilie level and ‘ , 

University to legislate against child prodigies, education service. The uco ^ 

It was quite unnecessary for the university to about methods of financing, 
bring its guns to bear on the unfortunutc Ruth extent to which we wanrtoj? ! 

Lawrence, or to follow up her admission by of the centre and die way u ^ 

slamming the door on possible successors. "My We need to chart u naW . 

main wony,’’ Dr Ginsberg Is quoted us saying, consensus of the 1944 Act to ^ 

"is that, as a result of the punlicity surround- nnd situations of the -late t 

ing the Ruth Lawrence case, many parents will do not believe that the only . 

be encouraged to try to accelerate their chil- the centralist one. We shout 

dren and cause harm to their natural develop- systems but at aspirations an ^ 

ment." Anyone who fears thnt Oxford is about be done to Improve the e 

tq be swamped with 12-year-old geniuses according to the resmirces ' ^ 

should; have more immediate things to worry identify more clearly the co . * 

qboiiu /; r :• ' i ; i , V '' . and the individual s entitle j£j)e 

Tb0,que3(i6n is not: Is it ideal for a 12-year- I have argued for. some y , , vyf 
old to go to Oxford?, Nor yet is it a matter of major, education Act. - ■ 

making a guess about the long-term slaying We need to be ^ ear a w' erpff^ 

power of a 12-year-old with exceptional pre- dards nnd how far they 

pubertal mathematical ability.' It • )s simply a legislation. Wc sritist ^ 
matter of what bureaucratic dbstacles Should democracy to leavc^^ 1 t tbbs*- 2 
be put in the way of thpt tipy fraction of the develop their- pfovision t n 
child populatioit endowed .with these quite dards^^ tlft ' way that sims 
exceptiohai gifts. To legislate for John Stuart' area. , in iheci» 

Mill would be absurd. It should be a virtue of If wc could find the nm ^ 
a college system that it can cop© With indt- of the early 1940s 10 p “‘ chbaldK 
viduoi cases bit an Individual basis. system for after the war. . ^ 

find time for a similar ewi * r w ; 
than push through a the 

tioa which transfers powers ^ 

flnancial . arrangentents. . , : 

i 

. Association of 


these changes is to ensure n ^ fS, 
on education which reflects the P 1 ^ . 
intenrious of the Oovcrnmenl oflMjj 
practice, n system on ilicso lines wouMg 
the central government with 
controlling Ilie level nnd the 
| education service. The debate ^ 

! nboiit methods of financing; it 
! extent to which we wanri°^ u| a jP_g 
of the centre and the way in 
Wc need to chart u new 
consensus of the 1944 Act to the 
nnd situations of the late twenilwj-. 
do not believe that the only ’ J 
the centralist one. Wd should 
systems but at aspirations and n«J: ■JJ 
te done to Improve the eduaW ^ 

-i:— live rpsmirces availawy y* 


major, education Act. • • 

We need to be dew 
dards nnd how far they 
legislation. Wo 


Oxford colleges have quietly 
their own admissions 
res. Tqn Oxford colleges - 


Miss Browne said she did not think this without additional resources, 
she could divulge the authorities' others could not. 

res Ten nvf™i n™ ’ ?T CS ^ c » u .sc she had ^theretflie--- The Education Secretary com- 
n'JV 1 °*»>™ colleges - information in ceiifldenoe:’^; mented that some local education 

' St^Huoh’s^Sff' 5 !!f 1 ’ TJie TES on M ar ch authorities were damaging provision 

•. si Hughs, SomcridlUf-r^flLone of the authorities Is Gates- for the disadvantaged by railing to 

head, but the identities ofthe other ma j c ^ econ omies in areas that did not 
three are still a mysterv. Mr Patric* a ^ ect education, such as catering. 
Cormack, a member of the commit- g| r K c jm sa jd he favoured cumcu-. 
lee, said there had been speculation j um . lc( j[ staffing, although he recog- 
Jhat they might be among Suiray. |h# difficulties j„ terms of ntisB- 

Dudley, Lincolnsldre and Hereford matc | 1 0 f teaching skills. Dr Rhodes 
and Worcester. ' ' , . Boyson, junior minister for schools, 

The four were in a group singled ad£ ( ed th Bt the mjss-match between 
out in this year’s HMI report on the teac h er 8up pi y and qualification 
cuts as having already caused con- ghouW ^ beared up” ' to the next 
cern last year but having cut tneir four w flve y eHrt , 
provision further since. . ••• ^ ,-„Kn«irir str. Eaith uid he 


provision further since. 

Miss Browne’s stance was backed 

other colleges are saldTo up by Sir Keith Joseph, who said the 
•MWar procedure for very MPs questions challenged the very 
*?fWates who cannot get independence of local education au- 


On textbooks, Sir Keith said he 
was "a little confident" that local 
authority spending might increase be-, 
cause booksellers reported higher 


— U ;• vaimui get 

'■tat teaching at school. 
J^ *d missions picture at 
“ ftS 31 ] 58 actually quite 

■£*2 «tiU takes more 
^rrent of its entrants on 
^^JPWal exam and, of 
n ,°w take the 
Xs ^ levels.; At Cam- 
S'^wp-thirds of the. men 


Independence of local education au- ^SS la The past six 

thomies. And he said that ending 8cnoo ‘ 8 - p 

SSSSffiisjrf 


exerase. 

Miss B 
effect of 
identified 


unconecied; iVWuld have more 1m- 

pbrtant consequences than arching c^s ^ dec ^| 0 j, 9 which were 
else in the reoort. It arose because to i * « 


of the women are P? rtant «>nsequences 
basis of the exam - eke n 2 

^tbe.majorlty sit it after P CQ P ,e te . nded t0 cut 


what came to integral to the spending of each l.e.a. 


why Oxford did 
‘Wed Willi Sir Peter’s 
“ 0xf °rd has 
‘ mo r e successful 
at gctlmg people to 


Engineering Council chief named 

Dr Kmocth MBtr, 

¥3s, to wK He U ->T n ““ 8 " ,s 


dlrccloi* of the APV company 



A school party watches a potter at work as part of The Living Arts of India 
Exhibition at the Serpentine Gallery In London until May 31. The exhibition 
then lours provincial cities. Review, page 27, 

EEC row may hit training 

by Nick Wood 

•A complete break in Britain's rela- sion. In 1980, the EEC set aside 


S to “ b mig forward legislation of 12. than the remote dispensation com- 

that no person who is less Dons, led by Dr Matthew Gins- mlttee, which is a subcommittee of 

0 16 years of age may be admit- berg from Brasenose, feel that study the university council. 

1 to matriculation without the per- at such an early ^age can harm the Cambridge University has already 
boo of the dispensation com- child's natural development. They decided the issue. It does not admit 

' will try to provoke a postal vote. On students under the age of 18. 


MPs fail to make Inspector 
break silence on l.e.a.s 

by Biddy Passmore 

Miss Sheila Browne, .the Senior hand, such as parMlme teachers. and 
Chief Inspector, resolutely refused small reatUng..--group* -In primary 
(his week to identif^tl^ a fojiLJQcaJ^«chotfirbt expensive craft provision 
education -nutlrorlfies fo whom she in secondary schools, 
wrote recently expressing concern Schools must try to counteract 
about the effect of cuts on their this by taking stock of the money 
schools. they had to spend and, In consults- 

In the face of insistent questioning tion with parents and governors, 
from (ho Commons Select Commit- making a shared decision on priori- 


tlonsbip with the EEC - In jeopardy 
this week after the unprecedented 
row over farm prices - would have a 
dramatic impact on the youth train- 
ing schemes funded by the Depart- 
ment of Employment. 

At present about 25 per cent of 
the money spent on training young 
people for work comes from the 
EEC via the community’s social 
fund. 

Last year the EEC provided £141m 
for training and employment mea- 
sures, £89m of wnich went on 
schemes for young people. Of this, 
£59m was spent on Ihe Youth 
Opportunities Programme managed 
by the Manpower Services Commis- 


sion. In 1980, the EEC set aside 
£47m for YOP schemes. 

"The EEC provides very signifi- 
cant help to training and employ- 
ment schemes in this count ry", a DE 
spokesman said. 

Nor, as was widely forecast, did 
Britain pay out far more money to 
the EEC budget than it received in 
grants. The predicted deficit of 
1400m worked out to a shortfall of 
just £J8m after wild fluctuations is 
world food prices. 

But little EEC money is spent on 
education. The budget for all the 
countries ot the community is just 
£5m. In Britain, most of this goes on 
six pilot projects designed to aid the 
transition from school to work. 


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AMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


Platform 


lllf. T1MKS MWCATIONALSum.,^ 


ILEA switches cleared lecturer I Boyson in 

£=S Ke e w S * he al,e8Mi0nS **"“ as- » college ,o gel u „ f „ atlack . pledge OH 

*^i e matter w a s then reported to At ... . “The students were unable to dis- vrA-atc 

e further and higher education sub- thls l P oint ' according to sources tmgwsh between allegations and DlaYvlS 
immittee in accordance with the ?■ tempers were running proven statements,” one staff mem- r * 

jff code, and it was decided in h g 7 A P ,ack student ran amok with her said. . , D , . . ~ 

arch 1982 that no further inquiry an J ron ^ ar and had to be disarmed Biddy PftSSmorC 

scussion or action was warranted.” a P d , a ? taff meeting called by the . Aftcr the staff meeting, on July 30 Complaints that schools were breakina 
The girls who made the allegations P rtncl P al turned into a “squabble". !ast , y ear - Mr Crighton lodged a for- the 1944 Education Act by not provid- 

ninct Mr Andraiih. Hnn 1aohi rn . nn. . TtlBl CHHin flinl noaitiei Mr Anrlranw in n n — r if. . . __i • « 


i 1 : .-! 

' 1 I 


A bitter taste of the Polish Diet 

Two weeks ago a group of distinguished educationists, including five chief education 
officers, signed a letter to THE TES urging Sir Keith Joseph to abandon 16-plus 
examinations proposals. Here A.D.C Peterson joins the debate and puts his case 
against external examinations at 16. 


Kd this week. discussu 

fajffair, involving Mr Gordon The g 
. a senior lecturer in cheims- against 
jJttDMway-Princeton College in Woodbe 
Pt, iftjich has about 6,000 stu- London 

Lo^ 01 ?' .."f arp Man], nrncp remarlrn 


ainst Mr Andrews were pupils at 0ne lecturer said: "Staff were „ plaint against Mr Andrews, ina a daily act of worship would be 

oodheny Down School in North equally divided between those who ■ Pe . nd, ng the outcome of the formal followed up, Dr Rhodes Boyson, 
>ndon. They reported his alleged that since there were do charges T ^* caTn „ by Miss Joan minister for schools, told MPs this 


i rturloo which has about o,uuu siu- London. iney reported his alleged that since there were no charges vameu oui Dy miss Joan minister for s 

half of whom are black, arose remarks to their teachers, who subse- 1,6 should be retained and others w a an ILEA s,a V ‘"specter- week. 

£m’ interviews with two girl stu- quently wrote letters of complaint to who pointed to the threat of disnip- Mr A ™ re «: s was suspended from his Speaking at 
E£ one white and one black, in Mr Maurice Cnghton, the college t[on - the students had made it clear T 1 ** inquiry conducted in the House of Corr 


dents, one wain 
March last year 


principal. 


tlon - the students had made it clear P 0 ?’ !ne mc l UII 7 conducted in the 
that if we retained Mr Andrews we aut H mn ,erm took evidence from 18 
could not teach in the autumn term 8taff » ^ members of the students 


Speaking at Question Time in the 
House of Commons, Dr Boyson said 
the Government had no plans for a 


The time, abilities and energy of administration is exhibiting the snme What, then, is the mol i vat ion in sonic subjects, it is an argument for 
hundreds of our most experienced symptoms. No reform which is the first, second, third, fourth and broadening the IK-plus examinations. 


educators arc presumably worth 
something. Are they being wasted? 
For the past three years, they have 


worth opposed by any important pressure .sixth years of the secondary course? 
sted? group has n chance of implement;!- Why is it only at 16-plus and iK-plus 


tion; and (here are almost as many that this questionably valuable exter- 


nal for retaining an external ex ami - 
natiion at 16-plus. 

If. then, such a rational European 


been sucked into the increasingly pressure groups involved in examine- mil motivation is required? ('on- and radical reform were to command 
abortive discussions of the common lions at 16-plus as there were in timious internal assessment up to 16 itself to the administrators, rather 


examination nt [6-plus. For the pre- those at 18-plus. nugni not omy nc imrcr out sprcaa 

ceding 20 years iney were sucked But there is a way out. Why the motivation over a longer period, 
into the finally aborted discussions of should we not, like the whole of the “Standards would fall drastically. " 

broadening the sixth form curriculum rest of the industrialized world, do Doe's anyone still seriously believe 

throuah new examinations at 18 -dIus, without external examinations at 16- that our academic standards are so 


ceding 20 years they were sue 
into tne finally aborted discussion: 


nse ai ie-pius. might not only be fairer but spread than a further 10 years of discus- 

But there is a way out. Why the motivation over a longer period, sions, how would it he likely to fare 
ould we not, like the whole of the “ Standards would fall drastically. " with the pressure groups? It whs the 


' Tfc two girls complained of re- At uboul the same time, the stu- “jjd »ot teach in the autumn term." „ ' ° j^mbers of the students survey ©f current practice but was 

. J,b which they said Mr Andrews dents union at the college were in- . He added that Mr Andrews had “ Wood f. er . r y D .own alwnjrc ready to receive representa- 

St concerning students at the col- formed. According to a union b ^ e « * h « victim of a witch-hunt but su PP hed written tions. He emphasized, however, that 

lae. , , spokesman, the students raided the that W* somewhat abrupt manner had eviaence - the DES received only about six com- 

tion board. But these are a mho* Bat an official statement issued last principal’s office one evening and ® ad ® n»m unpopular with staf and Mr Andrew& refused to comment P |aints B y ear on tMi subject, 

and the financial probtem ® j by ILEA said 1 that Mr Andrews Founc the leUers students. J 1 whafhaT happe^He He was responding to a question 

paymcnts for Si Chief inspector) had an ocoroation ^ r , said , that Mr has now accepted a one-year con- from Mr Ivor Stanbrook, the Toiy MP 

iw ■ , L • S nf fhe in and he P He tn>H S fi T Cl ?8 ht0D ..! ,ad &tn placed in a diffi- tract, with the possibility of renewal, for Orpington, who complained that 

l or the examining bauds, l considered »t (the report of he in- and he left. He tried to sue the cult position because many of the to work for the authority’s science “the aptly named" Charles Darwin 

would present a real probbij* toy) and decided h,m .f T 8 i staff wo “ ,d tl n J ot take the normal Inspectorate on curriculum develop- School at Biggin Hill had never in its 10 

traction and probably an iiKrt»ip«e was no material which would m our college newspaper and asked course of rallying round a colleague ment in further education. yearhlstorv provided a corporate act of 

the cost of 1 S-d|us examinatw. tl: 1 . : 1 — — wnrxhln mnminn BC » m i.iv 


was responding to a question 
from Mr Ivor Stanbrook, the Tory MP 
for Orpington, who complained that 


through new examinations at 18-plus. 


previously silent majority of teachers 
n the schools, quite ns much as the 


ll'i >i ; • li ; 


Those discussions finally petered plus altogether? All except us rely at markedly superior to those of the universities, who killed off reform ut 
out, after the rejection of ^General" this stage on internal school assess- Dutch, the French or the Germnns? 18-plus, when the Butler and Urinult 


and “Course" requirements 0962), ments, combined sometimes with ex- 
Majors and Minors (1966), Principals ternal tests in the mother tongue and 


wloyers a 
ployers wj 


demand them.” 


committees 


Employers will always make use of agreement. 


reached 


and Electives (1967), Q and F and N mathematics. If they do not need a whatever assessment system the »w c urc sick and tired of endless 


and F, with the decision of the battery of external exams at 16-plus schools provide. In Europe where no changes," they said, as they voted 

Schools Council not to proceed even anywhere else in Europe, why do external system comparable to O f or th c status quo, "Let us get on 

with a limited experiment, for which we ? level and CSE exists, there is no with our job of teaching sixlh-for- 

50 schools and colleges had volun- ' ' j * - - 


Let me try to deal with the most demand for it from employers. What mers." it was an illogical attitude 


teered to operate a broader curricu- commonly used objections to a radic- employers need from a 16-year-old since there had been no changes for 
lum, leading to an examination al reform which would save a great school leaver is a character reference 3(j years, but an understandable one. 

deal of money (for spending on nnd Qn assurance that he or she is Endless talk about changes is almost 


n . • i 


!' : b : : ' 1 • i 


already recognized by the universi- , x _ r 0 _.. e ... 

ties, for a trial period of four years, books nnd equipment) and restore to literate and numerate. Since most as time-consuming as change itself. 
It would have cost £80,000 spread teaching nnd learning the Inst two such leavers are seeking local jobs, T j lc t CQC hers, I think, might accept 
over the four years, a fraction of terms of the fifth year, now largely employers will usually get the first on a decision if it was firmly mid rapidly 
what had already been spent on dis- devoted to “mock" examinations and ™ telephone from the school and made At | gilst j t wuu f ( | gj vc them 
cussions in a foredoomed attempt to then real examinations. It would also «> uld gc* the second from lest scores moTe limc lo hack to teaching, 
achieve consensus in advance and a probably increase thc staying on rate In English and mathematics. People 0f coursCt n number of touchers in 
fraction of what is now being spent and save some thousands of teenn- who get 10 O levels should not be thc rir,., vCnr do relish the challenge 


!?■ >:•: i 

!■ ' I: «; ■ 

fin i:' : 


would present a real probtanofi* 
traction and probably an Inert* 
(lie cost of 18-plus examinabots, a 
the extent that these are sobuW 
from profits made at 16-plus. ^ 

The universities should be saioSd 
if the change could be mm 
with changes in 18-pluS exainimtii 
on thc general lines recommadalk 
thc Butler Committee, with pt% 
the six subject pattern of \k (*»' 
tional Baccnlaureatc rather thait' 
subjects plus “General Stuicj*. 

In 1905, Dr Warre, the b du 
ter of Eton, contributing to a 
sitim in the Strojid Magaziiu n'v 
the Public School Boy 
rated?”, wrote: “Then again tbeuf 
tiplication of examinations- ah 
sole end in view cannot bei|tf 
thing. The present age Beru'i 
dined, if I may so speak, pto 
exaininatlonem exaiiihwndl mb 
causas. This and the growing mtild 

I.. -.311 T v 


jots in 
loxteth 
no surprise’ 

jj Richard Garner 
Atnchers' leader said yesterday that it 
n*saia]l wonder" that youngsters in 
Trtetb bad rioted, given the problems 
afirbau deprivation highlighted in last 
beck's HMl survey of the district's 
bools. 

Mi Alf Budd, president of the 
frtM Union or Teachers, was 
tddressing a conference of some 250 
tubers, councillors, police, commun- 
wrkeis, probation officers, health 
ratals and church leaders held 


Si; it i : - 

P : WW- ’l-: 

i||i 

||||: 

: 

iJiij . 5- ■ 

^ 1 

L i ■ •• 


fraction of what is now being spent and save some thousand! 
in a foredoomed attempt to achieve gers from unemployment, 
consensus at 16-plus. "Without the incentive of external 

The Polish Diet, with its system of examinations, which put the teacher 
blocking vetoes, was incapable of and the pupil ‘In alliance' against 
agreeing on reform: thc “part- the examiner, pupils ca” — * ' - 
nership in our system of educational motivated to ivnrk." 


motivated 


ner, pupils 
to ivnrk." 


who get 10 O levels should not be thc fiflh ' r do ro!ish „ lc challenge f‘»' dd . «? Fime goes on. t° href 
seeking jobs at 16. of , hc oxternu | exnminulions. just us oemluiiti 

"Universities are beginning to find “good examinees" do, nnd even the . Perhaps the old gem m 

that a good spread of O level compurutivc rclcusc they get from J Mi: ■ — re- 
grades is a better predictor than classroom teaching, while others fi- Alec Peterson m 

Individual A level grades ." nance their summer holiday by the director general of the hum* 

If .this is true, as it might be In. drudgery of marking for nn examinn- Baccalaureate . . 


- - a, . » dMuintidtuia auu wiiuilu icaucia uciu 

specializing early will. * union’s headquarters yesterday*, 

found, ns lime goes on. to niwfluir *£d ucat j otl by itself cannot solve tne 


Richard Lynn, however, argues for an extension of 16-plus to cover the whole ability range 

Time to provide a school leaving certificate for a 

The current uncertainty surrouuding come more like universities where It education provided. Unacceptably citizens and workers should he uhle rending nnd 

the introduction of the now 16-plus is taken for granted that virtually all largo numbers arc voting with their lo rend such things us voting papers, cw \ red by “ ,l - . J. sa me wnf 

examination, planned to replace students will graduate. The now gen- feet by truanting from school. All lob adverti«pncnts, \clcplinnc uitcc- wwi i» . oc» j j j wJ u | 

GCE O level and CSE, affords a oration q) secondary school aradu- these problems would be helped by lories, social security leaflets, hire ns loarntiig JSJEam** 


mhlems of the young growing up In 
i which are in decline ana where 
prospect of joblessness is, nt the 
nt, a near certainty for many of 
, he said. 

, He called for a coordinated 
Wtoadi by all those responsible for 
JwKhng services in Inner city Breas -• 
Wnwre resources to enable teachers 
P« yoiing people growing up In an 
prompt in which they can sec 
p*- for the future and not only 
Nl.and despair. 

PS^ °f hope of a job, which 
E “8™ly "nd status, must be the 
B-ifwIttina factor of nil", he 


examination, planned to replace students will graduate. The now gon- feet by truanting from school. AU 
GCE O level and CSE, affords a erntion q) secondary school grade- these problems would be helped by 
useful opportunity for further consld* alos would of course differ In the the extension of the new 16-plus to 
urntlon on the form the now exam grades of pass they obtain, jus! as do this group of academically weaker 


numbers arc voting with their to read such things us voting papers, 
by truanting from school. AU Job advertisements, telephone dliec- 
problcms would be helped by lories, social security fennels, hire 


purchase agreements and so forth- 
Similarly. In mlllimetir, everyone 


universally aeconted ttai dJ 
can and shou d. 
same assumption shodW IN m 
basic competence In 


liriffhrto ndnltoceutn . • * • ■ ■ ■ • . • • auiwou ueiuu cuuuiiiuiium TIOUS Kina'-, Hnu SO tin. icwi liuvc 

■ - l. , vTT' ■ ' , r Let us be clear about the purpose that the weaker third or so of adoles- beon constructed for assassins these 

.. But by far tne greater weakness of Q f (he examination. Its chief objec- cents is not able to take a public basic skills, not only in reading ant 

the proposed how oxam lies not at dve ls to provide a goal and to examination, there are in fact no arithmetic bul also in other subjects 

the higher but at tne lower end or generate motivation lb. achieve that particular difficulties about extending i n ihe secondary school curriculum, 

the ability range. It Is here that cnnl. Exams are wldolv used ns usa- the new 16-olus to cater for □! 


proposed hew oxam lies not at i tlve Is to provide a goal and. 10 

the higher but at the lower end of generate motivation tb. achieve that particular difficulties about extending rii lhe secon t la ry school cu rricufum . 
the ability range, It . to here that goal, Exams are widely used os use- the new 16-plus to cater for all 

the. . Proposed new 16-plus needs frl motivating instruments through- adolescents with . the exception of These minimuni competence tests 

rethinking. out : the educational system. Even in perhaps one or two per cent who are have comfe into widesnreud use in 

universities, where students are typi- . educationally subnormal. the United States with generally 

Theaim should be for every f^SS. t ‘SSL 3 

. 16 -ycar-old to acquire at generate additional motivation and mhilmum oass P grade for S lower Pr 0 ** 1 ® 1 "* rimlior to those in Britain 

: least basic passes in reading students are generally required to sit ability erouos As orcsentlv onvis- of , lar 8 e numbers of school leavers 


examination, there are in fact no arithmetic but also in other subjects 
particular difficulties about extending in ihe secondary school curriculum, 
the new 16-plus to cater for all 


i'?. j . 



mmr 


i Xl '. 1 

n.r, ji; J i . 

If 




f f i vehi^ -sliiee the 'NeSVsom. cortmuteeV. to dcqnlre. it without ( the structured 

, ■ cbMdered;-. the;! problems, of .-..thlyV framework provided' by a fprmal- Cur- ■■MHMHjtaBi exnmi It W hepn fmVnd in *tlie iiscu^e^..»* gaww 

grdtip l ’6f adolescents" and l ^wbo 1 ■ have _ public United States mat around 85_ instrument die ^ 

men Jed the intioduoflon of a ucon- : examination W>ork /pr. U examlna- It Is now nearly 20 years cantof odol^sccm 9 S'nKs. tlS <ind f ? r 

U n .-.) nn MWlCMta W a ’ hnAd W «hA:.e!rA nn J) .. n . Ik. 114.'. tOUl OI OUUieSCCniB CTn paSS II1CSC |_ a .- r » or « a )U (.ihlrt.M 


stence testing movement 
ecome widely established 
ist decade or so In the 


It is tests set at this level which 
need to be added as an additional 
grade 6f pass tb the new 16-plus 
exam; It .has been found In the 
United ' States that around 81.. per 


failure, which curr» -j 
afflicts aroundaUil^^ 
adolescents, wffulojjjjp 
disappear from 
scho ol 

Tlic acquisition of 
should be a prirnsry aJJ ^ 
tlon. Adolescents ft 
Should be striving tog^f^ 
;cry of these skills aja 
acquisition of them 
cated by passes in tire 
There would be ra P id jLffE* 
general public 

adolescents would a^^i 

basic posscs in these 

the new„qxamljjj?»Q n ’ • ■ U 
The Mtftdffce j 

UsclfriiScome_;an W. .goleg 



to work for the authority’s science "the aptly named" Charles Darwin 
inspectorate on curriculum develop- School at Biggin Hill had never in its 10 
ment in further education. yearhlstory provided a corporate act of 

— — z- worship at morning assembly. Mr 

SnAAinl Stanbrook also claimed the school's 

Uvvldl headmaster did not believe hymns and 

Mr prayers were “nny longer of rele- 

SlllflV Five years ngo, n survey of more than 

. X 1,000 secondary schools by the Assls- 

by Diane Spencer tant Masters and Mistresses Associa- 

A large scale five-year programme to tjpn found that only 21 percent started 
study and improve education for pupils the da V wlh corning prayers, 
with special needs has beeh set up by On teacher training, Mr WiUiHtn 
the Oxford Educational Research Shelton, junior education minister. 
Group with the help of ihe Rayne disclosed that the Government had no 
Foundation. plans for a general shortening of 

Dr Harry Judge, convenor of the courses. Ministers were still consider- 
group and director of the department ing the proposal from the Advisory 
of educational studies, said the prog- Committee on the Supply nnd Educa- 
ramme would have two goals. One was tion of Teachers (AQiET) that the 
to improve teacher (raining for special special one-year training courses in 
educational needs, the other would be business studies and cralt, design and 
to investigate management strategies technology, should continue beyond 
and tactics in schools to see how they 1983-84, the last year currently 
coped with the new special education planned, 

aC rw, m . aw .k „ or _ k- In ils submission to the Govern- 
«nI^StpTf£m h n?tSr nirt ment » ACSET *1*0 proposed that 

pSlnr£!b£h concentrated two-year courses to 
SrHi«? 8 Q n Sim llStn attrBCt mature s ^dents should be de- 

JS velo pe d t0 ensuTe adequate long-term 

^ • eacl * r ’wy in ■ horta » e sub ' ec,s - 

Oxfordshire, but the group hopes to Sir Keith Joseph, the Education 
establish strong links with another Secretary, told MPs on Tuesday that he 
university and working links with the doubted the wisdom of increasing 
United Slates. educational opportunities outside the 

The DERG founded In 1974, and classroom for children over 14. He was 
chaired by Professor A. H. Halsey, is answering a suggestion from Mr Alan 
currently doing, research into modern Haselhurst, Conservative MP for Saf- 
ianguage teaching, the impact of scien- i r °n Walden, that truancy might.be 
ce and technology on schools, maths reduced if pupils over 14 could pursue 


^ • eacl * r in i|,or,a e e sub i ec,s ' 

Oxfordshire, but the group hopes to Sir Keith Joseph, the Education 


passe? in to 
die new 16 - 
Secondury 


" ' ■ 


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X 

■ I : : 


i. i. . 

■i : u > 7- 

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, I '!• I- •' 

1 : #lf: 

• i. 
'■ fi 

: p-f* < 


vc huu icuuiwugy uu auiuuia. mtuua wuiu jiuhuw f ..4- . ; 

teaching and (he support of more able more courses and development “not •: Jf-V 

pupils In comprehensive schools. necessarily found in the classroom''. 















h? I • V ?; cn, i».-.*yr l vvj; 


f '*»« W , r .^ | ^ y^ES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


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Primary and Pre-school 








T “ K1IMI * ^‘^' ^IONALSIIPPlem ^J 

Boarding Schools 
Association conference 

Boys still shun the 
arts in spare time 




r*n=*H 



’ 1 


French lessons: teachers on the Whitelands course 


Improving the French connexion 

by Julia 'Hagedorn 


Wine with lunch emphasizes the Gal- 
lic flavour of a total immersion In- 
service French language course bcinj 
conducted at the Roenampton Insti- 
tute of Higher Education in Surrey. 

For three days a week, from 10am 
until 4pm, including lunch and tea 
breaks, 12 Surrey middle school 
teachers communicate exclusively in 
the French language. Their classes - 
which include grammar, films and 
film criticism, contemporary issues 
and imaginary incidents - are con- 
ducted totally in French and the 
teachers must converse with each 
other in French. 

The five-week course wns devised 
by Whitelands College at the insti- 
tute in consultation with the Surrey 
Inspectorate. The local nuthority 
pays the toachers’ fares and 180 -daw 
of supply _covor in their schools, The 
Institute pnft the tuition fees as part 


of its in-service work for teachers. 

Surrey has had n policy of teaching 
French in primary schools since the 
Inte 1960s, out found itself in difficul- 
ties after recent cutbacks in staffing. 

Mr Roger Bailcss, modem lan- 
guages inspector, decided to tackle 
the areas where the need was 

{ ;reatest. He • asked for volunteers 
rom teachers of eight to twelve- 


year-olds who were taking classes in 
French but had only O level qual- 
ifications. Twelve were chosen from 
36 applicants. 

The course was specifically de 
signed by Us tutor, Mr Ralph Gas 


The course was specifically de- 
signed by Its tutor, Mr Ralph Gas- 
kcll, with the help of three French 


assistants, to boost the teachers' 
confidence and remind (hem of voca- 
bulary long since forgotten. 

They; all agree! that the total im- 
mersion technique has given them 
new confidence .in' speaking French 


in the classroom. 

Mr Bailess is to evaluate the 
course and hopes to finance more 
courses to help some of the. teachers 
from the 154 middle schools who did 
not get a place on this one. 

Meanwhile, a school in Bletching- 
ly, Surrey, lias found an ingenious 
solution to its lack of French special- 
ists. 

The local adult institute provides a 
French teacher free of charge to 2t) 
third-year children one afternoon a 
week at St Catherine's first and mid- 
dle school provided adults cun join 
the children in the classroom. 

Eight adults arc working alongside 
the TO-yeiir-oids. After some Initial 
excitement, the ..class has scllicd 
dpwn extremely well, according to. 
Mr John PlCkfn, a teacher at the 
school. ' 


Children’s books criticized for sexism 



V{ i :hr ■ 

[ik;! 

j 

tei 


The policies- of publishing houses in 
producing books for children were 
criticized, al : a‘ conference an sexism 
in children's literature, held in Shef- 
field this week. 

The conference was held by the 
Sheffield Women and. Education . 
Group' to coincide with the publica- 
tion of 'its four nop-sextat and non- 
racist supplomehiary readers. bfofrq ' 
Mootelth, author - qf’oilo oif the. . 
. books, told, how the reudore had 
coma to be funded by the Equal 
Opportunities Commission, after the 
publishers Macmillan had. "Interfered 
with .their content'! and finally 
goffered "an, insulting contract"; * 

• -She said that Macmlllati, had origi- 
nally Disked the group to vet its Gay. 
"Way reading scheme. for. sexism. The. 
group's : criticism was- accepted bii| 
suggestions were never implemented. 
Macmillan asked it to write four 


more supplementary readers for the 
scheme. 

The group set out to redress the 
balance in the malc/female ratio in 
Gay Way. It ulso wrote a new ver- 
sion of Jack the Giant Killer with n 
female giant. 

- Teachers who were sont texts for 
testing were hostile . toward them. 
The group 1 made changes but Mac- 
. millan offered- a cqMrqct whiih did 
nbt Include toyaittos.oi credit and 
paid only £150 per render. So the 
group tore up the contract and ap- 
plied td the EOC. Two yonrs Inter, 
the stories have finally appeared. 

“Funding must exist,” Moira Mon- 
teith concluded, "so that group such 
ns this one arc 'hot hampered by (he 
demands made by publishers.” 


demands made by publishers." 
.Another publisher, Longman, 
came udder fire for its Breakthrough 
to Literacy scheme - one of the most 


mi 







Sclinolhoys still chug to their Philis- 
tine heritage, according to a new 
Jiiiivey of leisure interests ami activi- 
ties at a leading public school. 

Sports either team or individual 
- remain the favoured pursuits of 
pupils at Rughy School. Mr Brian 
Rees, the headuuistcr told the annual 
conference of the Boarding Schools 
Association last week. 

Mr Rees confessed to being 
alarmed by the boys' evident lack of 
interest in the arts. 

“We cannot be ton coni place tit ab- 
out our transmission of cultural 
values. Very few of my guinea pigs 
mentioned art, drama or music . . . 
All the boys came from a house with 
a strong tradition of house plays, yet 
none mentioned drama .ns a possible 
leisure for the future. Music and art 
figured not at all. 

"The standards of our music are 
much higher, but I think the gap 
between the musicul and unmusical 
remains virtually as wide as ever. I 
believe we could and should be 
doing mure to inculcate musical 


appreciation, the bask 
necessary to tour an art SJ 

rile amount Of time devoted k 
leisure declined as publiuS 
linns loomed. First formm£ 
aied in an average 30 hours a S 

by Ihe O level year tuTh 
fallen to 10 hours. * 

Some 60 Rugbeians of all mu 
abilities took part in 
which threw up some bizam dtfc 
tiuns of what boys mean by Ik* 

One hyperactive member of b 
lower sixth described it u 
spent enjoying squash, bAfei 
rugby, cycling, tennis, atUefctf 
physical sport" - all . craning • 
Four hours a week. • 

A second former hadTb 
punishing answer - "no Mum 
mentally or physically". Eqdft 
tangible was "having noiMMi 
after a game of cricket", Hi 
Rees favoured “being TonuSi 
nothing but doing sgmet(rii|fi 


Some bad news 

for our competitors 


Education chief recommeil 
boarding for all pupils If 


Mr Andrew Fairbairn, director of 
education for Leicestershire, said the 
fall in school rolls - expected to drop 
from 9 million to 6 Vi million by 1991 


- from concentrated study 
and adventure training, ti 
hoarding, subsidized by thel 
should be nvaiinbic for afan 


popular with more than 50 per cent 
of infimt schools using if. 

Celia Burgess, a Hackney teacher, 
in a taped presentation, explained 
hbw she had used Breakthrough for 


- offered a "wonderful opportunity" cant of youngsters. : l 
to expand state boarding by adapting ' He said it was wrong’l). 
surplus premises. hoarding schools iw nin ( 

"Withdrawal Into » residential academically gifted. - 
situation should be free, naively cn- Ilis enthusiasm was wm 


gin to emerge quite markedly In this 
country." 

Mr niirhuirn said that every large 
comprehensive school should have a 
hoarding house where children would 
pursue: a “kuicidoscope of activities" 


staffs as an integral part of the cdu- the authority , has four „ 
catitmal experience of every young houses - "a pathetically wi 
person during his school career, pur- her" - and o canlp 
ticulmly of the adolescent," Mr Fair- Hall in Charnwpad For$*.. 
hairn told the conference. "Youngslcrs irorh mW 

"ir this uppronch was udonted, backgrounds in the uiyo^ 
gruiluuHy a threshold of imdcrstand- march the seven of eignt.n] 
mg of 1 now to live : together and r»f their rations for a wce {$5« 
raised aeudemu; standard* would he- at a total cost of 

"We provide safari be#, 
and cold water. They dq -I 
cooking, moku their own 
sonic cases for the first hi® 
lives), luy tables, wnshup 
out other duty ro? [ers ..; J 


sexist even when the text did Pot 
demand' ll. •, 

Analysis liad shown 34 boys as 
central characters, but only 18 girls. 
Women were always depicted in the 
household role (and almost alwuys 
wearing hn npron) whenever "Mum ,r 
was mentioned. Sixty women were 
Illustrated shopping but only nine 
men; not one picture showed n 
woman relaxing, and girls were often 
excluded .from scenes of physical 
activity. , ■ , 

- Sexism', she said, was deeply and 
~ subtly pervasive In the readers. She 
criticized a story entitled The But- 
tonhole by Pamela Schaub which 
showed a girl so lost in a fantasy world 
of princesses that she could not get 
. dressed,;: ! .i . •> 

: i - Rosemary : iStonCs.-^revicwer .lot 
i Spare R^.aniL co-edttot' of the Chtt*. 


area's Book Bulletin, prificizcd 
l^dgmaii; EdiWfs had.triea to draw Up' 
wiU-iexfat guldeiipbs 1 L it Jh^re had 
n«m a!?tnMSive ktiiik" and, the man* 
a^ement had- dropped the guidelines. 




said, had : a firm’ • pbucy of- • Vetting 
twojes fot sexisip.. ; ,, 

, 1 A: Spokesman s foV ’Longman qaid 
that, thg, company had; taken greater 
tp;a)rola fifcxlsip. iii later books in 
the stores r which . included . on story 
about, 'a vSingie*parerit father,. !“ft 
le 'thfags ti 



argues in a pamphlet (his week. 

School -leavers nrc faced with u 
"bewildering and uncoordinated 
plethora of options”; it snys, with the 
majority of the age group receiving 
no post-school education or training 
at all. 

Clear routes should be established 
from school to further education via 
link courses, from Youth Opportun- 
ity Programmes to further education, 
firom day release to FE and from FE 
ito higher education. 

• -The 'oamphiet, Further Education 
In d Multi-Racial Society, says that 
i local authorities: should; 

. • publish u : policy statement en- 

Protest on Scb 

Leaders df (lie National Union of 


• appoint local languap 
und outreach employment, 
work with wljeaes; ^ 

• evaluate college amt ^ 
formance by keeping 
and monitoring educai 

meats. ... 6 

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ethnic minority. 


tl-cultural educBnonvg.^ 
teaching materials 

' Further 

London, S W1H 5EH. v^ ->, 

nnls CbUnCil 


shows dad dolpg all the thirigs that 

S pm , had done: m; jhc earlier, series,” 
> said. vi.-; -.'.'‘i 


tJine;, obviously tehded. tq , see their 
mums tp th^Tjme orrole.^ : 
.-'At .’thdtMe.oflg0l4g.fp press * Mac- 

■.sV f?j« few J *r ;-v%. • 


Ms plans to aboJWi the Schools 
Council... . * 

The uidotifa executive voted et the 
weekend to. deplore what It termed as 
f.tHe disastrous consequence' 1 of Sir 
Keith's plans (6 replace the Schools 
Council with two separate bodies to 
nioMtor examinations and the: curri- 
culum. : • 

, ' MeanvrhU«t the union Is planning 
to set tip i heelings wilh local cduca- 
Upn autfioriUes' and school governing 
bodfea tp raUy support fair its efforts 


sssrsfi' 

annual conference. ^ 

(he BboHUon • 
and campaign wr 
armament. . , t mJW 

Ttae&gs 

(ear weapons 

n...U.nl DrtUll 


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1 UK TIMHS V.BWAT10NAL SUPPLER 


Jflg TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 



Will Welcome John Paul be slotted 
on the turntable in thousands of 
homes tlmt bought this record made 
by the 8 to 1 1-year-olds of S( 
Winifred’s Ront an Catholic school, 
Stockport? 

What use for the 18-ft scale model 
of Raginton airport adupted with 
podium, altar ana crowd corrals for 
the papal visit to Coventry on Whit 
Sunday, made by the pupils of near- 
by St Thomas More’s junior school? 

Will (he welcoming bunner worked 
by the girts of Our Lady of the Good 
Counsel school and intended for the 
entrance to Menton Park, Manches- 
ter on Whit Monday, be hung any- 
where now? 

Hours of skilful application, these. 
But sheer scale of planning and ex- 
ecution and, therefore, great risk of 
subsequent disappointment, must 
attend the pageant of Roman Catho- 
lic history m England due to unfold 
at Coventry from 7.30 that morning. 

A whole year of creating, organiz- 
ing. directing, rchenrsing. . . 12 de- 
partmental heads of drama, a choir 
of i .100, an orchestra 85-strong. 
1500 performers, no fewer than 36 
schools involved. . . 

These are among the more his- 
trionic responses to the announce- 
ment of the first visit to this country 
by a Pope. 

But every Roman Catholic school 
in England, Scotland and Wales has 
responded somehow. In many it has 
been not much more than contribut- 


Bert Lodge on the welcome children have been preparing for the Pope 

Labour of love for papal visit 


ing something towards the Ifim the 
visit would cost. Father Gerard 
Meath, Manchester press officer, 
said: 'They’ve been doing anything 
and everything. I heard of one junior 
school where they went in for such 
things ns running round the play- 
ground for a copper or two. They 
raised over JfotK).” 

Sister Mary Peter, head of Heath- 
field House RC girls' high school, 
Cardiff, where the Pope was ex- 
pected on June 2,snid“ Wc'vc had a 
display in the foyer and of course, 
the significance of the visit hus fi- 
gured prominently In RE lessons. 
Some or our sixth formers were to be 
stewards, some were in the choir and 
others had volunteered to help with 
souvenirs in the marquees”. 

Among those who stand to be dis- 
appointed in the London region arc 
a number of children among the 200 
handicapped who were due to meet 
the Pope on his arrival at Wembley. 



cial train at Easter. 

Sister Aquinas, head of St 
Winifred's, was quite matter-of-fact 
about the record they had made. 


Willi two golden discs and two sil- 
vers for earlier chart-climbers she 
could afford to he. Iler KU-stumg 
choir is, for this record, under con- 
tract to EMI. 

“The school made Mutchtfalk Men 
in l*J7K followed by (imiidimi. That 
sold 750,00(1 and is still selling. Liter- 
ally {Hip. But (lie welcome to the 
Pope is quite u dignified song. It's 
our tribute to the Holy Father. Wo 
are waiving nil claim to royalties on 
this and giving them to the charitable 
trust set up by the bishops to help 
pay the cost of the visit. 

The success of St Winifred's has 
encouraged amateurs here and there 
U) have a go. "We didn't have In 
satisfy anybody we were commercial- 
ly worthwhile ”, said Mr John Gro- 
gan, head of SS Peter and Paul 
School, Ycndon, near Leeds, speak- 
ing of his choir’s first records, Wel- 
come and We Love You. 

"They just went to Manchester 
one day and recorded it. I keep them 
in a pile here at school and sell them 
as asked." 

Homely. A world away from EMI 
marketing. But Mr Grogan did con- 
cede that swinging a little publicity 
towards his music teacher, Sister 


Maria Cm mack, was on the advice 
of a parent who knew n hit about the 
commercial music world "She does 
after all snip the solo and play the 
guitar, lie icckoneil lm% ing a nun on 
the record sleeve. . 

At St Thomas Mme's, Coventry, 
Ihc pupils chose to express their wel- 
come m another medium - card- 
board. matches, plywood, glue, nails, 
for the model airport, Mr Frank 
llavertv, the head, was ruefully phi- 
losophical about the possibility of 
cancellation. ”1 personally put a lot 
of work into it to get it ‘to scale at 
least horizontally; not vertically, that 
would have been too difficult, 'lire 
whole school has been involved. 

“But educationally I'd like ui think 
that all (he work put in will have 
been of some value. And the chil- 
dren have seen the model put to 
practical use. The police hnve put it 
on video to help them work out their 
duties and wc have had teams of 
stewards and parn-mcdics up here 
studying it.” 

No such practical compensations 
for those involved in Ihc pageant of 
Hollywood proportions under its 
Cecil B. de Mille, Mr Harry Mellon, 
head of Cardinal Newman RC com- 


prehensive, Coventry. 

Hie plan was to show 1 ?^ 
from St Augustine comW^ 
kp. nghl throughES^ 

- the niulti-coloured 
twentieth and twenty ffLj* 

Altogether 2,000 child?? 
Runcorn to Danbury sod {«_ 
verhnmplori to » 
part. About 1,000 pujfc 
schools were to present theSi 
wHh another nine schools 
m to the linking scenes. 

"Wc were going to use mv«b 

Jurcell to plainsong and so- 
cially written’’, Mr MeR, 
’Some of the pageant was *J 
televised live ncross Bonne ntJ 
duy morning. The heaTofh* 
here at Cardinal Nemnd * 
dramatic director assisted to 11 «' 
nin heads of other schools 7 
"One nice thing - « y 


conflict after which CfaTiiittop 
cccd to tear themselves aiwtfa% 
next 300 years." 

The estimated cost ctf the Gw 
try occasion is £600,000, hot Mu 
Ion reckons the pageant woedd he 
cost no more than £6$Q, to* 
cannot be calculated isliucoadG 
hard months of preparing, pm 
and organizing by tea&HtajJ 
excited anticipation of 2,000 pup 
ters. 


Some good news 
for our customers 


Keep SSRC and leave it alone, 
Lord Rothschild recommends 


by Biddy Passmore 

The Social Science Research Council 
should not be wound up and should 
suffer no further cuts in its grant or 
reviews oF its work for the next three 
years, Lord Rothschild has told the 
Government. 

In his report on the council’s fu- 
ture, published on Wednesday, the 
former head of the Think Tank con- 
cludes that Jhe SSRC’s dismember- 
ment Of liquidation "would have 
damaging consequences for the 
whole, country and ones from which 
it would take a long lime to recov- 
er", Even If it were to be abolished, 
a similar body would spring up to 
take, its place, he says. . 

Lord Rothschild criticizes the 
"disturbingly low" proportion - 5 per 
cent -'or oil research councils’ ex- 
penditure accounted for by (ho SSRC 
in -view of the wide range of current 
social problems. He also attacks the 
reductions. In its budget which hnve 
occurred under successive govern- 




meats, amounting to 2*1 .per cent in 
real terms over the past five years. 
The council lias difficult! 


ahead with this "sword of Damocles 1 
hanging aver ft, he remarks. 

He therefore recommends .that Its 
budget should not be reduced below 
Its 1982-83 level of #0.9m for a 
minimum period of three years. 


“irrespective of what happens, 
through sheer necessity, to the other 
research councils”. There should also 
be no further external inquiries for a 
minimum period of three yenrs from 
June, lie says, because these tire hav- 
ing a "discquilibrating effect”. 

when Sir Keith Joseph, the 
Education Secretary, asked Lord 
Rothschild to conduct a review of 
the SSRC last December, ho asked 
him to examine how much of the 
council’s work might be paid for by 
the ultimate customer ratner than the 
Exchequer - a principle supported by 
Lord Rothschild in his 1971 report 
on the othor research councils. 

But Lord Rothschild says that 
moit of the research sponsored- by 
the SSRC - which is long-term and 
general in its nature - could not lie 
cturieil out on that basis. Yet there is 
no. doubt of tho need for on indepen- 
dent body to fund research, whether 
"pure” or "applied” for which no 
obvious "customer” exists, ho argues. 

On postgraduate training. Lord 
Rothschild notes tho slow completion 
rates for work in the social sciences 
-but' says these might be taken as 
proof of tho essentially contested na- 
ture of many of the subjects and the 
intellectual scope and breadth of 
learning required to make ft , serious 


contribution. 

. He suggests that the cou nci I 
should encourage departments to in- 
itiate Amorican-style PhD program- 
mes, with a rigorous first year of 
(aught courses followed by an ex- 
amination and two further years de- 
voted to a thesis in which compe- 
tence should be as importnm as ori- 
gUftlity,. . ; . .... , - 

The SSRC should make awards 
linked to tills kind of programme and 
devise a system of sanctions Involv- 
ing the withdrawal of grants if too 
niuny students failed to complete 
.their course. * 

Lord Rothschild criticizes the 
council for falling to pul Its work 
across to "the man In the street”, 
describing Its efforts in this respect ns 
"nrimltive and unprofessional" ; It 
Mould make a sustained effort to 
eliminate unnecessary jnrgon from 
the work it supports, ho says, nnd 
the SSRC head office should buy 
,four copies of Sir Ernest Gowers 
Plain Words, 

Me also recommends that the 
council’s 70 committees should be 
reduced in numhor. 

An Enquiry Into the Social Science 
Research Council, Cmnd 8554 
HMSO price £6.50. 


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icriptions, 
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Thirty staff may be disciplined by union 

by Richard Garner 

Thirty teachers from a London com- 
prehensive whose headmaster Is a 
top union official may face disciplin- 
ary charges which could lead to sus- 
.pensioo from (he National Union of 
Teachers. : *. • . • 

They were among 42 staff who 


•nr 


NO INTERVIEW! NO JOB! 


1/ - 

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i • • : 

i V- 


, i 1 -' J 


• • -; 1 


Jlf.you don’t fiSten interview voy cairt oat ihKjob/So ydu'r CV 
Is tall Important. It must Inform arid icpprSn a potential am^oyer 
wfth lta obisctfrlty, lucidity, layout and relevance; Te gat that r 
i vital lute rvlew It. most be prpfoaii busily . Written Sfld presented, . 
: tnhshivfce VW may fall at tfw first hurdle. 1 
! ^ CU'rrtc(lld|>VlthS are the professional' (and ixlnlnall braduoar* of 
.dV'S. wUh tyrflrilbrtfris from .ipAriy ntljiflodj 
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^Uftfielll.nglWiflta Qr phoria .nj^yvior ■ details..: *•; •, 

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■L5b SohB squire i^hdon!W1V 6PJ 61 .459 : 1 39t 


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possibility of their ?2 colleagues 
being compulsorily transferred to; 
another school because, of failing 
r^lls. ; '• • ' v 

■Now i their colleagues 
within, then 


are cam- 
union for a 


lay strike throughout the whole 
of Inner London schools in support 
of , ^eachers ;) 'faclng compulsory, 
traiiswr.i , i ‘ 

' Tallin^ rails have meant the rede- 
ployment Of eight teqehers from Wil- 
Uhm ?enn school, whose headmaster. 
Mr Bob Richardson, is general 
secretary -of the Inner London 
Teachers Association of the NUT 
and chairthan ot me NUTs action 
«jninuttce. : i ; i>.'; ' ■ •• 

;J : !Th© school staff association , ■; which 


staged a oneway strike when 12 col- 
leagues, from Whom the eigiit are to 
be chosen, faced interviews. As a 
result, the school was shut for the 
day, although' the staff association 
allowed* thorn to be interviewed. 

NUT members had tried to get the 
; support of the ILTA for their action 
but failed; , although they claimed it 
wa$‘‘lLTA policy to oppose compul- 
sory transfer. v 

' .Mr Richardson said that at present 
’it was riot the, policy of the lLTA to 
oppdse all job losses. 

In addition, the. union had on 
:agreeirieni With the Inner London 
Education: Authority which ^ would 
:4llbw any teacher facing compulsory 
transfer to stay at hjs or her present 
School for aq extra year if no satis- 
factory offer of an alternative job 
had been made, by July 15. 

. Under -a timetable agreed between 
the umonvarid the ILEA, all vacant 
scale one posts in Inner London 
schools will bo advertised in a special 
issue of Contact , the ILEA maga- 
zine, early next month.. Previously , 
this had not been the case. 

Since the oho-day strike, the 


30 NUT members who too 
. to Mr Wed Jams,™ ^ 
ary of the WT 
they have so far not cw 

: strike that no .NUT 
'take part in it a* 

'. against Union 

the schoo -W W? 
strike, whfchlg* 

b . ein ® °J^i d scipM S 

teachers ™ l , be 

.day’s pay and may ^ 

,ettor - . coi,ih«rirk 

Members of t! gJr , oS*! 
elation of he 
. pressing ftj^r unto" 

Say strike in P™»’VT 
aory transfers on 

■ re nllrlflfV m eBaU1 TLi!» 


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Hestair Hope are Britain’s leading 
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^nence and I ttiiayeartluFIull colour 
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We stake our reputation on every single item we sell- 
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delivery you have a right to 
expect. If you are not fully satisfied, 
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order for an immediate refund. 

No matter what level, or the 
size of your school or 
establishment, from playgroup to 
final year studies, you are entitled 
to the new 1982 Hestair Hope 
catalogue. Just ring Wendy Perrins 
in our Marketing Department 
on 06jl*652 1411 for any copies you require. . . 

When it comes to a good deal in educational supplies, 
the choice is obvious. 


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£50 order 

Threshold 
order value 
lor carriage or 
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HESTAIR HOPE 

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| Source ol Infomation-curmit 1982 catalogues || 



%1VF/ 



b S5KJe&l^?%Bqpe Limited, St. Philipp Drive, Rqytori, Oldham. OL2 6AG Tfelephonft 061-652 1411 Tfelex 666515 


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Government plan to woo colleges 

£2m industry courses 
programme receives 
good reception 


by Sarah Beyliss 

The official launch of a £2m Govern- 
ment programme to gel imivei sides 
in id colleges more involved in 
courses for industry was welcomed 
this week by professionals already 
working in the field. 

However, (here were warnings 
tliai the incentive to public sector 
collegas and institutions would be 
reduced if income from the course 
fees are pocketed by; the local au- 
thorities rather than reinvested. 

Mr William Shelton. Under- 
secretary of State for Education, 
announced the formation of Profes- 
sional Industrial and Commercial 
Updating (PICKUP) at n special 
conference organized by the British 
Association for Commercial and In- 
dustrial Education in London. 

Speaking on behalf of Sir Keith 
Joseph, the Education Secretary who 
was attending an emergency Cabinet 
meeting, Mr Shelton said the main 
purpose was to encourage refresher 
courses for people in mid-career paid 
foT in full by tneir employers. 

The courses should cover advances 
in technology and management prac- 
tices as well as commercial and inter- 
national law, statistics, foreign lan- 
guages and the ability to communi- 
cate well. 

Industry was, he said, “crying out: 
for a constructive response from the 
educational system". Some further 
and higher education institutions 
were already responding to the de- 
mands from industry but “the re- 
sponse needs to be quicker and more 
professional." 

The PICKUP programme repre- 
sents the Department of Education's 
official response to n discussion 
document it launched 18 months ago 
on a continuing education and voca- 
tional provision for working people. 

A survey In that showed that in 
1979 70,000 people were on short 
courses in polytechnics, 138,000 were 
on short courses in universities and 
21,000 were on short and post-ex- 
perience courses of the Open Uni- 
versity. 

Mr Shelton said the programme 
was an essential part of trie Govern- 


ment's aim to improve the competi- 
tiveness of British industry and to 
develop a well-trained workforce. 

He described four pnrts to the new 
Initiative: 

• Regional workshops to spread ex- 
isting; good practice, the first of these 
to toko place next month ‘at Lough- 
borough University! 

• Course materials to be developed 
and collected by the Further Educa- 
tlo Curriculum Review and Develop- 


Tl IK TIMES 


ineni Unit (FEU) aiul embodied in a 
PICKUP liumlbook. The Open Uni- 
versity has already received a £lm 
sum in its grant earmarked for 
PICKUP courses; 

• Regional development agents 
working on a three-year contract, the 
first to be appointed in the East 
Midlands; and 

• Stronger information networks to 
be developed between employers, 
employees and institutions with the 
help of workshops and agents. 

Altogether the DES had earmark- 
ed about £2ni fro (lie proganuuc 
which would have to come out of 
existing resources and which did noi 
represent nit increase in spending 
plans. 

Later during questions Mr Shelton 
agreed (hat many colleges of further 
education and polytechnics were 
obliged to hand over their fee income 
to the local authorities- “I accept this 
could well act as a disincentive," he 
said. But some institutions were 
known to have found acceptable 
ways within the luw of.retaining fees. 

The DES had commissioned n 
questionnaire on the subject and was 
collecting examples of good practice 
which would be available soon. 

He also agreed that industry must 
establish its training priorities and 
that the scheme would not work un- 
less it took up the opportunity to use 
institutions. "Industry must realize 
the competitiveness of the world we 
live in and that they will compete 
better if we have a better trained 
work force.” 

Dr George Tolley, principal of 
Sheffield City Polytechnic, welcomed 
the initiative but said the £2m fund 
was small set ngainst (he £llm the 
DES allocated annually to adult 
education. 

Professor John I lor lock, vice 
chairman, of tho Open University, 
said the OU was now offering 140 
courses and “packages" In continuing 
education. For example, 5 ,000 people 
had taken two self-study packs on 
microprocessors. The in-service educa- 
tion programme for teachers had some 
10,000 students on courses (n the 
diploma in reading. The university has 
given high priority to professional 
updating courses for -the future. 

Mr Robert Arculus, principal of 
Coventry Technical College and presi- 
dent of the Association of Principals of 
Colleges, -described several courses. 
Mansfield, Nottinghamshire, offered n | 
four-day refresher course for mining 
deputies; Belfast hold a two-week 
block course for supervisors when (he 
DoLorean motor compuny opened,, 
and has held n correspondence course 
for textile firms. 




Farming for new ideas . 


Mrs Jen Peace, pictured with her husband Brian, took a four-day short 
course In calf rearing last autumn organized by the Blcton Agricultural 
College in Devon. 

Mrs Peace, who has farmed for more than 25 years, heard about the 
course for dairy farmers through a neighbour ami attended lectures In u local 
hotel. “You can get terribly entrenched locked away on a farm und the course 
run by Blcton gave us a valuable exchange of ideas," she says. 

The course, which cost £12, brought local farmers up to date with Intensive 
new techniques, improvements In rearing methods, grass management, dis- 
ease prevention ana how to keep efficient farm records. 

"Our herd Is much better off as a result," said Mrs Peace, who keeps 94 
milking cows on a 200 acre farm at Rackenford, Devon. 

Councillors ask for TV 
ban on headmaster’s film 

by Richard Garner 


Coventry councillors are attempting 
to ban a controversial film about 
teenagers which wos financed by n 
retired headmaster. 

Mr John Lemon, the 63-year-old 
cx-hcadmaster of Whitley Abbey 
comprehensive school, originally 
asked Coventry education authority 
for permission to make u film about 
life in the school before he retired - 
but was turned down. 

He then went ahead with a far 
more ambitious and controversial 
project - sponsoring his daughter, 
Lizzie, and another independent 
film-maker, Ms Kim Longorotto, to 
make a 50-minuto documentary, 
Under Age t depicting intimate details 
uboul the lives of teenagers from the 
school. 

Now tho city's councillors want to 
slop it from being shown on tho 
grounds that il could damage the 
youngsters - and arc appealing to thb 
BBC and IBA not to allow it to be 
shown, 


Boyson accuses unions over governors 

by Biddy Passmore 

The Labour Party and trade unions non-teaching staff belong. This urged pervatives have control of the school 
• were accused last week of using NUPE. governors to liaise with their governors, It will be to the detriment 
school governing bodies for “sheer local Labour Party and Labour coun- . of our members.” 
political manipulation”. cillor to ensure that they did not vote Dr Rowm aid w 

In a speech to Streathatn Con- for Conservative Party nominees, ■ h ow — ! J S 

servatives in south London, Dr Mr Dempsey’s letter said; “When annninrtri n^mnrcwl. bo . 
Rhodes Boyson, education junior the county council Labour group de- nted v Governorships should not 

■minister, cited, an attempt by the cided to appoint trade union non 
■ ■ National Union of Public Employees' leaching governors It was clearly oui 


. uivil ui . ■ / • .j r •. . ™ ivs v 

H6.reftd out a Copy of ’p letter (O . tlotf ^serylce. 


^ppSwde union F non- J W Pf 11 "™ 1 ** 

■overturn it was clearly our JlL .M* . »?, ‘8 £°P le " ” weie 
to exert! the trade unlon wjioUy. commltted to the children; . 

jWthUt ^he governJng body . ’ But, Mr Dempsey said this week 
inent 6f;0utipembership as- , he could s6e /nothing wrong in his 
»r the. benefit ' of the educa- action,; He said: . “Fof years, aov- 
ce-" . erning bodies' in Lancashire nave 

governors should not vote been tightly controlled by the Con- 
irvadye ; nominees because,!;, seivatives,, who have only been in- 
jarly, as long . as the Con-. interested In keeping down rates.” 


kihtatkinal summon *.T 

IE- 

handicapped Lib 
is a hit 

human right 

by Diane Spencer Srtg 

Integrating handicapped children^ T5. 
«rdnwTy schools is a matter of and i 

Pie and human right?, a “"f 

was (eld this week. m 

Mr Tuny Booth, who nuu . out 12 ti 
emirse on special needs in edurab 
.U the Open University, »jd j n , a 
should noi lie a matter of "prodwi« Shefl 
..^passionate list of ^ 

I lc was addressing b one-day cot 
ferenee in London organized by k 

Spuslics Society and^he A^ JJS 

( entre for Education. 5 

i.oeal authorities should be (kn- 
ing up a “prescription of iruenkd 
practice to implement the new tloll 
cial Education Act which would r^ 
elude a description of current pne- SL 
hcc, a general outline of change om S? . 
the next five years and a ipedfir g* 1 
plan for reforms to be made widui 2J 
year, he suggested. ' 



However; now 


Mr Peter Lister, vice-chairman of 
the education committee, said the 
film included n scene where n young 
girl discusses sexual problems nl a 
supposedly private mcutlng with u 
counsellor - mid another where u 
young boy wus blind drunk. 

“It would have been different if 
they had ItnU professional actors in 
the roles und treated it like a Cathy 
Came. If nme documentary, but these 
arc 14 and 15-year*o)ds. Some of the 
children und their parents ure ex- 
tremely distressed about it," he xniil. 

Mr Lemon defended the film 
though, nnd was hopeful it might he 
shown on the BBC. "It is hot a 
comfortable film” hu said, "but it 
shows a world in which some young 
people to live." 

Mr Lemon added that he folt that 
some of the councillors who lind criti- 
cized the film were unaware ol this side 
of teenagers' lives. 


Another cuts 
victim 

The cuts in university budgets 
claimed another victim this week 
with the closure of the country's only 
industrially-based degree level course 
in home economics. 

The University of Surrey expects 
to save £120,000 over the next three 
years, by scrapping a four-year course 
combining a year in industry with 
three years spent studying applied 
science, engineering, dietetics and 
behavioural sciences. 

The 120 students who are current; 
ly taking the course will be allowed 
to complete their studies. 

The decision to close the home 
economics department has taken 
after six months -of wrangling, two 
reports by the. academic working group 
and ft mt-iii by students. - ^ 

1 Dr Arthur Tarrant, deputy bend of 
the department, called the senate's 
decision a "disaster”. The course was 
popular - there were 11 applicants 
for every place. 

, . "This course is filling n national 
need," he said, "Our graduates dre 
very much in demand -- they have no 
difficulty gettings jobs in wenllh- 
crealjng. industry. Stopping this 
Course is directly contrary to the in- 
terests of industry**. • . 


Britain should borrow ideas Inn 
the United States and Norwjul 
break down education auiboritn 
into smaller units or policy areas n 
improve integration, a vertical grera- 
iug of schools from nursery to fe4 
er education. A special school shod! 
also be included to avoid it dndop 
mg in isolation. j 

Integration could not be actewi 
"on the cheap", Mr Tim Yeo.diw 
tor of the Spnstics Society, waned 
It wus a process involving teade 
training, expertise and special aids. 

"So if an education authority is 
paying lip service to integration m 
•is a real danger that it could k 
damaging, not beneficial. 

l ire society hod a commiUMotto 
integration but it would notl brew- 
ing down its own special senoou^ 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


Tn brief 

Library cuts 
hit borrowing 

Cnts in the opening hours and re- 
^rces of public libraries are biting 
ZtrSSa of books loaned; 
lording to toe Association of Met- 
Solium Authorities. A report by its 
«£and recreation committee chums 
that an otherwise steady increase in 
shraiy usage since 1974 luis been 
reversed in many authorities over the 
put 12 to 18 -months. 

Sheffield bequest 

Sheffield University has been left 
£ 535,000 to set up scholarships by n 
fonner graduate, Mr Hosscin Fnrmy. 
An Iranian, he graduated in en- 
djseeiiog in 1938 and beenme a suc- 
cessful businessman in America. 

1 Craft shortage 

Qaft. design and technology 
Kadiing was still failing to attract 
enough good quality recruits, Mr 
Wiliam Wfilaegcave, education 
junior minister, said last week. He 
toki a design technology exhibition at 
Bund University that despite some 
inproverrient craft design and tech- 
nology teaching remained a priority. 

NCV0 flm plea 

A £1 million public appeal has been 
bundled by tne National Council for 
Voluntary Organizations. The indc- 
pendeut chanty founded in 1919 
mndes professional services and in- 
farmahon (or national charities and 
local community groups. It also re- 
presents- the interests of the volun- 
pry sector employers and trade un- 


i» -*S v V 

■4* . 


' 'v \ 


Literacy backing 

■a!!?!** iinmiunecd Inst 
E'fJL y commuu to fund the 
Basic Skills Unit, 

10 hy given to 
Mi Wil- 

MWtoji, Educaliim Undet, - 

Jrf 89 on until at least 1985 
has been set aside for 

few magazine 

L kL. •• 


HoffiWjS 1 ’ uiBgazma , Gifted \ 
kSS'Jf 1 "Wlonal, is to be 
JJ^ihls summer to coincide 

Vap courses 


Integration will.ljftve 

assistant director 


spend £250,000 w 5 "fan 
plemcntlng ,he I ) e i[s a place 
would liave to }rte P' d 
what some & 

will see ns . 

other parts of the servi 

Mr Alwi.Ojjj?' eSfdh® "Z 


of ."technological top- 
graduates who 
RS" ? ve and 15 years 
Redeveloped by the 

Applications and mnnufac- 


_ New BBC 

Programmes 

1982-83 

FOR INFANTS 

RA ™ c *,«r^. Sc i ence; See for Yourself 
TELEVISION • Words and Pictures 

FOR JUNIORS 

RAD!0* In the News .Maths Songbook# Maths Games* 

Reading Music . Technology: 9-12 Ideas into Action ■ 

10-13 The Bicycle Programme • Word Games 
TELEVISION • The History Trail * JVIathscore One and Two • The Music Arcade • 

Science Workshop .Watch : with subtitles for the deaf 

FORSECONDARY 

RADIO • Computers in the Real World . Economics: CSE Your Money and Your Life • 
0-Level Supply and Demand . Business Matters . Spelling and Punctuation • ' 

Functional Reading,*. General-Studies: Radio • Child Care (CSE) • Teenaqe 
MagazinerWaveiefigtn . German Level III: Hallo! Wie gehfs? • Bioloqv- Field Studipq 
TELEVISION .Going to Work; Life and Social Skills . Computer Club . 
Language in Action • Geography Casebook: Britain • British Social 
History . Tout compris (simplified version) • Walrus 

Details of these and all other 1982-83 programmes and 
publications are in your school now. 

Send your order for publications on the form sent with the Annual 

Programme by 23 July 1982 to: 

BBC Publications, Schools Orders Section, 144 Bermondsey Street, 

LONDON SE1 3TH. 


to Times Newspapers Limited, N|gel Deni8on 

Supplements Promotion? Manager 
'• ■ N274 ;. 

Times Newspapers Limited 
PO Box 7 ; 

200 Gray's Inn Road 
London WC1X 8EZ 


c 

led 

cash please) made 


•l'v 




‘ -! ' 

■:Wl\ 


"'fif 









2 





E.J.AR NOLD 

CATALOGUE 

PRICES HELD 


Educat wsS®» 






ffSy 


Since the beginning of the year we have 
achieved our aim to set new standards in 
educational supply-the most comprehen- 
sive range of quality products available, 
over 500 new lines, a completely revised 
easy-to-use catalogue, and unrivalled 
seven-day service. 

AND NOW WE ARE GUARANTEEING 
FIXED CATALOGUE PRICES ON 
ORDERS RECEIVED BY1STJUNE1982, 
less of course your normal dis- 
count. So, from E J. Arnold at least, 
you know you have prices you 
can trust. 

Most suppliers increase 
their catalogue prices during 
the year as manufacturers 
increase theirs. So far we 
have absorbed those 
increases and will con- 
tinue to do so until the 
beginning of June - and even 
then we only expect a small number of enforced 
adjustments. 

■ , : Sopickup the EJ. AmoldEducationalSupplies 
Catalogue now. It will save you time and money 
;4; ; If you want an additional copy of the cata- .■ 
lbgue, please write or telephone: Ej. Arnold Ltd, 
Educational Marketing Department, Butjerley 
Street, Leeds' LSlO lAX. A Tel: 0532 44Z&4. 


' “ 1 '* * * t ~~— - 



THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 2I.S.82 


A new tech approach 
to putting students 
on the right course 


L.e.a.s break 
law on 
handicapped 

k.. m . ■ . ^ 


by Bert Lodge 

A level students wondering where to 
rum after failing to get into universi- 
ty will soon, have nationwide com- 
nuf*H7£d held. 


^A nfiw Educational Counselling 
and Credit Transfer Information Ser- 
vice (ECCTIS) is soon to be hum- 


vice (ECCTIS) is soon to be laun- 
ched as a pilot study in south-west 
England with ‘'substantial" financial 
bacimg from the DES. 

The scheme will also help students 
keen to get into higher education but 
whose qualifications are not the con- 
ventional A levels. 

It will tell them which institutions 
have, agreed to accept alternative 
quaUGcaiions. Similarly students who 
«ish to, or have to, interrupt higher 
education courses at one institution 
can find out which other universities 
or colleges will allow them to con- 
tmue without obliging them to repeat 
ibe whole course. Colleges and em- 
ployers will also be able to discover 
Ac relative value of differing qual- 
ifications. 

Lait week’s announcement from the 
DES follows a feasibility study into 
Ibe transferability of educational 
qualifications conducted in 1978 by 
Mr Peter Toyne, then a lecturer in 
geography at Exeter University and 
now principal of Bishop Otter college, 
Chichester. 

Tt. . ■ ■ i *11 . 


SSMrtssSii 

formation technology companies unrf 
educational instituting P Bnd 

The next stage will be to test and 

Pilot schcm. C - ° S .l n Sys,em throu S h a 
S L° ! JS5£ rac m lhe area covered bv 

» Un S WMIern regi0Ml a< lvisoiy 

* n Ji ® 0,,ect 1 i on of information will 
take place early next year with the unit 
ojen for inquiries from September 

„,A spokesman stressed last 
week that they were not establishing 
a system of credit trarfsfer. ‘That 
!!!“** remain with the institutions 
themselves. But when approached 


by Richard Garner 


2h l educfl,lon authorities 

fnr h?n P J d t0 a surve y on provision 
children are break- 
T ® ! he aw ( j National Union of 
Tochers said this week. 

aB **«»rltlea are not guaran- 

J5jy P hSSif * or co,le 8 es for 

LfL £ ^? pped P erson who 

STS of?6 e edncatlon be > ond 

l 04 educational author- 

The survey also revealed that fewer 
than one authority In 10 provides any 
residential accommodation for hand- 
icapped students attending special 
courses In its area. 


Schoolgirl mothers not 
receiving home tuition 

by Julia Hagedorn 

8HSS&S “ : n T “ hools whenewr 

een Cox, an educationaf psycho- ShiSlSw SLS?- that » 


lOgist. psycno- 

Cm. a conference on 


DsvchQ- ehlmlu - m i n . e that a 

psycno Sheffield primary adviser had refused 

“Jp™ ? e space for a schoolgirl 

mothers unit because it would be "an 


“Parentinn in the 19805” in London last uiSu!tSli ini / n ECaUSe .. ie T ould 1x5 * an 
week thatloss of education wasonenf !Sfi? ble » n S ue nce . but accom- 
the most serious consequences of an En«H tl ? n ^ ad subsequently been 
accidental pregnancy “ fo ™ d in a Misery school. 

A I „i r VY' She WAS mnrPmtH I*—.. 


. And she referred to a recent studv concemad » however, that 

m Sheffield which revealed that the nTttrH 11 *- wfls . now 6e, ng used as an 
oiy had no agreed procedure for **?«■. She had 

dealing with schoolgirl mothers - JintS . S ~ e ? tWO gir s term who 
largely because it wafnilfa ‘comoaT on al sch ° o1 bul wara 


hi qU " '— li0 ” abi . 1 

tne usual the admissions people will 
be able to find out from ECCTIS 
whether these qualifications are 
generally regarded as acceptable bv 
other institutions. ” y 

Following the Toyne report, a can- 
of 6I , 4 J ike ty. institutions showed 
that from 433 replies 328 would want to 
use the service and of those 264 would 
be willing to pay for it. 

- £ J a ! cr ? urve y covering students 
and their advisers showed that out of 
220 advisory services, 172 estimated 
they would make some 50,000 en- 

{llliripc n lino, Ak«..i nn : . .. . 


uiniwwi l 

He reported the following year 
at a national credit transfer in- 


— - H MUOIVI HI- 

tormation service was feasible and 
could expect initially about 18,000 
equiriM a year from institutions. 
Wien fully operating including stu- 
dent inquiries it would cost about 
M),000 a year but could ultimately 
Mtome self-financing. 

The first move by the DES is to 
isvite tenders for the design of a 
rational system to provide compute- 
km information. 


At the same time, one authority in 
approached jj* provides no financial support to 
idents hold- 1 gjjP nandlcapped young people con- 


L — i mwuitia - 

largely because it was still a compa- 
ratively rare problem (the city’s aver- 
8B «J S one 8 irl per school per year), 
A range of flexible provision is 
necessary to cater for the physical, 
medical, social, emotional, residen- 
Ual and educational needs of the 
and her 


flnHi tn hn-„b«rv 8 p r ,pK con " Da ?y» she said. 

p-jding jhi. 


vi umici ihac 

correspondence courses. Such courses 
education ° D,y roilte *° h,gher 


orl( „ . , , — j uui were 

asked to leave. 

Ms Cox expressed concern over 
the lack of sex education given in 
schools or, where it was given, to its 
total irrelevance to life. 

She cited the example of a girl she 
f® dse ^ n discuss her exams. In 
front of the girl, who was visibly 
pregnant, her mother praised the 

CPhnnl’e Inmlln « ■ 


fo,,owed Ui don 
fears that some l.e.a.s were breaking 

IS®, 5T b ? n u P rovldln i full-time 

education in schools or colleges to all 
teenagers who wanted It. 


needed to. But she said she woull 1 the conference wns held under 


and her 
tat sub- 


Stfirawisat 

She would invoke the Wemock ^ A < he 


. .““■••v ^u.uw Oil- 

quiries a year. About 90 per cent of 
these were expected to be from local 
authorities on behalf of further educa- 
tion students. 


Its survey also revealed that only 
one authority in 10 unconditionally 
ensures access to education in school 
sixth forms and sixth form colleges 
for pupils In special schools without 
sixth forms. 


AffiSftSS SSESKSS 


Warning to 

eclipse 

watchers 


The need for credit transfer began 
to he appreciated during the 1970s as 
concern grew about the high wastage 
ratesin higher education, estimated 
in 1977 at 15 per cent of first year 
university students, about 30 per cent 
for polytechnics. 


In addition, only one authority in 
10 produces special written material 
to attract handicapped students Into 
further education. 

Mr Bert Meakln, chairman of the 
NUT advisory committee on special 
education, soldi “I urge the govern- 
ment to Issue a circular to local au- 
thorities reminding them of their sta- 
tutory responsibilities towards hand- 
icapped young people.” 


Call to end locking up of 
children in council care 


by Sarah Bayliss 


A waniinjj t 0 icachcrs wlin might 

their pupils Ui watch 

& n'S e 0f ,hc ? wns Slivered 

y 8 in f a T al mccl,np «f d » e 
gallon fo Astronomy liSuutlion. 

SJSt ^hserviiuirv. licsalbcd 

"bSSI fi!£ ? ud i! cnlU>n millior* 
Kd 2l?5S ,r ®' Brii n‘ «nd Kent 


' urunl ,lrul Kent 
s . u ? d successfully by pn- 

ShAS‘!. med l H cir . 

Vn eclE dnm ^d_whiUx,WHtcr^ 

Hf tnM .l7‘ • ' ''' 


the meeting at Grccnwidi, 
SkJ ■? con «rned about thu 


bq.V u, ‘ 1 concerned about Ihu 
S^ hn 'snorancc of some 
are interested in ccles- 

RCffis an i w,,i> i,i,vc iiiy 

hut who wm run 
rr.^Mc Irouble, 


■ a^t irou oie. 

^7iSS5 t J a ^ l,wt Hertford- Pupils woi 
^ XiEfSji n A P, rl1 15,76 iunl projecting 
iWSRteL 1 .11 liud 



by Diane Spencer 

Children in council care who have 
not broken any law are being locked 
up for long periods, the Children’s 
Legal Centre said in a report pub- 
lished this week. 

A survey of local authorities done 
by the centre revealed that in Salford 
a 10-year-old boy had been locked 
tip for six months and a 12-year-old 
gir! from Leicestershire, in care be- 
cause of truancy, had been locked up 
for more than two years. 

"We find the restriction of chil- 
dren's liberty without speedy judicial 
review contrary to the principles of 
natural justice, reflected in the Euro- 
pean Convention of Huiqpn -Rights.** 


of children confined in this way has 
trebled, says the report. 

The number of single detention 
cells For solitary confinement has also 

in^rpaepri ol»kn«.»k al. . 


— vumiiKiiiciii naa aiso 

increased although the Department 
of Health and Social Security has 
advised that they should be phased 

on! * 


says the report, 

TTie centre wants the Government 
to ensure that no child is locked up 
unless it is a danger to itself or the 
community. At present the law gives 
no guidance on who can be locked up. 
Decisions are taken by child care staff 
and social services departments alone. 

Over the past 10 years the number 


The centre accuses the Govern- 
ment of ignoring research which it 
has sponsored. This showed that 
younger and less delinquent children 
were being locked up and that it 
might increase their chances of be- 
coming delinquent or violent. 

. ““ report proposes that no child 
ui council rare should be locked up 
for more than 72 hours without the 
permission of a juvenile court. At 
Present the decision to confine a 
child is not subject to any external 

Locked up in care , Children’s Legal 

as’Ai.fflsr Road - u - ti 



would watch the next eclipse by aligning a telescope with the sun apd 
ing on Image on to a screen ' 


CYCLEWAY 
Cycleway's gotta lot 


TYCIlllilg II 

one bny claimed lie only protected against 
ent dflmmlu Ik. l.nUl ..Ik., ll... rn(*n I 


• mi JUI1U J lCOUIkUlt,, B IwBvIICi 

from Simpn Balle School in Hertford 


tealfTn ' * ldSS rane a to give sheet or card was o 
m J®* . cause children (ended 

fcl t’EkSSL"* }l ft? d * "S'"-' .... .... . 


tne next eclipse oy aligning a iciwyw 
with the sun and prolectfogUp jmage of 
it on, to a serpen. Tne alignment ipuit 1 

L. J... .JiLmiI' Innki’nn thr^liah th* 


ppSPAs new school course material 
for 8-12 year oft Is more than lust 
an extended yerstori of the National 
Cycling Preflclenoy Scheme — It Is . 
a real education programme, using 
children's enthusiasm for cycling. 

And with Dairy Industry backing, it Is 
outstanding value for money/ .. 


.©’RMBT 


s 


¥*“ l conventional knowledge of the subject. , iw 
we wfttly useless” for Mr Marsh is current^ prepanng and I 


. ussikss ior mi wursii is luncmij — •• — • - . 

onomy clubs are looking up . . . 

J get astronomy Inin *hB HU dub has adopted a 1 rigorous, 


astronofn >' Into the school currlcu- 
deputy 10 Mr Colin Goodman, b 

ho ! d of Hustings High school In 
hc N(Un a school club 15 
^n tt .«nthujrf o lS 0w edge of ostronomy but with 
, BD1on 8 pupils. He now has 16 
^^Mfononv, 

• ?5ksrttiSS P 10 ** Iniporiant than a vast 
•^wouitu knowledge,” he said. 


Hb club has adopted a rigorous, hardworking 
routine. It meets every Friday evening and had a lecture 
for Junior buplb and one for senior papiU every week, 
On a fine night they would stay on beyond 9pm obsert- 

I.. it , a rl*u 


To: , The Roy^t Soclety for the Pirevehlfon or Acoidenie. • 

Cannon House. Pnory Quepnsvyav. Birmingham B4 BBS. . 

send me your leaflet ‘Follow Uiej Cydeway 1 (ailing me all about 
yournaw course material. • . . . ^ 


mi : 


^IfoadSd schools which wert just 

course to take up meteor watching as iM w N| 

Junior Astronomical M*. W a ^ 

K^nWMrCoeW- • ; • 


Address. 


■ . ’ : » i 






•v < -.1 


• rjf.> 


. 

fi 

•I yc •• 


.>{/ : r :i 




.M 

. i 


■m 




SI 


i* in 


'Wi 


'fyn. 


■JSSK 


p'^| 


i 




Courses 


CENTRE FOR THE l/ffc© 

STUDY OF 
COMPREHENSIVE 
SCHOOLS 

A few remaining places exist for the annual course 

TOWARDS GOOD SCHOOLS 

SCHOOLS FOR THE NEXT GENERATION 

Alculn College, University of York 
19- 22 July, 1982 

This annual course (or CSCS members and Heads Advisers and 
Senior Staff will concentrate on three mBjor aspects central to the 
development of schools over the next years. 

CURRICULUM - 16-19 and 14-16 
ASSESSMENT - 16+, 17+, profiles 
IN SERVICE - requirements & practice 
Lecturers include; 

Christopher Price, MP, 

Chairman Commons select Committee on Education 

Professor Malcolm Skllbeck, 

Professor of Curriculum Studies, London Institute 

Henry Macintosh, Secretary, SREB 
Tim Brighouse, CEO, Oxfordshire 
Shirley Wright. 

Headmistress, Wright Robinson School, Manchester 

For full details and application forms send sae to: 

The Secretary, CSCS, Goodrlcke College 
University of York, Hesllngton, York 
Tel: (0904) 414137 


CENTRAL SCHOOL OF SPEECH AND DRAMA 

ADVANCED DIPLOMA IN VOICE STUDIES 

This one-year lull-time course, which has DES approval, Is 
designed to meet the demand from a number of different 
sources for the skills of thB-voioe specialist. Applicants. will be 
recruited from actors and directors working In the professional 
theatre, teachers specialising In speech and drama and 
practising speech therapists. 

Write or telephone lor further Information to: 

The Registrar, Central School of Speech and Drama, 


Mill*: ! t \'JI K-rl if' V/ . 1 , 1 1 y*Cy. r i • f : TVrV 


London NW33HY 
Tel: 01-722 81 83 



HI S TOU VI ION 
Ol AM IQU S 


Two paw, only rw h ona-ynr 
fidl-ilnw prnit»l ixiihm tn iliff 
mi km ol amtquir fumi- 


rniuniwn atamkiuv Itaml- 
lure, clock* *ml liirocncicri. 
UcMlIibomiA. Mom*. H 
CiUiMfo'ii Road, ftlfhlno. &hui. 


I 



Mf Wolsox I hi! I 


T I IK TIMES KPUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 




Mr J H Rurdclt of Ihc National Westminster Bank presents the cup to the winning team from St Bernard’s r*™* 
High School, WestclllTe-on-Sca, Essex. • ani ® 


It’s not what you say, 
it’s how you say it 


m XJMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


Councillor seeks injunction to secure release of TraffoTTil^Tfi^ 

Coufi threat ov er exam resufts 

council is being threatened with Mrs Seex said this week it was 
bgal action by ope of its members part of her duty to answer const" Sri? education in Trafford, 
for withholding information about uents’ questions about the appeals SjJk , s “ Nothing to be 
ll-plus examination results. system, and to be aware if schools Sable by ««n.!, Wng the in “ r «»tion 

The Issue will be raised at the were performing badly. Unofficially nelS' k ,°! he { councillors seem 
education committee in Trafford next she knew of three schools within y » V £ 10 ,?° tbeir duties with- 

(oonth. Mrs Uuira Seex. n Lnbour mile of each other which had nass tinl ™ ^ UB : Indeed the educa- 
eouneillor, says she will take out n rotes runging from 20 to 60 ner cent ®J mi, J 1 , ttee had voted against the 
High Coort injunction if the informa- She stressed she was^tS when Mrs 

dm is not released within a week opposed to the selective system In Aj? ,ed i he matter ln hmm, 
after the committee meeting. She TVafford, but given its continued ex" in A SS ra from ‘be authority were 

clfthni that the council isiii breach of its istence, information should be avail- J°P taa primary 

duty to provide councillors with the able to councillors about how U SSf." 111 £ the y had evidence that 
fact* they need. worked. She agreed she was not a XjS |L was suffering, 

Since last year, Mrs Seex, u form- member of the education committee w tl If y Jnformed the committee; 
er keturer at the Didsbury School but claimed that should not affect ^ Eadl6 claimed that confiden- 
of Education, Manchester, and an her rights as a councillor. tlahty was maintained because the 

Open University tutor, has been The Labour group was concerned r eacl, ? r8 .' unions were opposed to 
uldog for the 11-plus success rates in to know, for example, what effect ^ aC j ^? ,n 8 released which could be 
Trafford 1 ! primary schools. mixed-aged classes in primary “Sf. f S f JW? tables - H e sym- 

Sht first asked for the range of schools had on performance. ft coun- V 1 ** ‘hat view. Indeed on 
pas ratei - the highest rate and the dllors were having to decide which . ' Mue > the council had “bowed to 

lowest - In schools across the author- primary schools snouid be dosed tbe °f the unions long ago", 

it*. “I was ^olutely astonished then past performance as measured Mr Arthur Crosby, secretary of i 
ww 1 was refused this informa- by the 11 -plus success rate should be ‘he Trafford division of the National 
d°n, sw said. available as part of the information Union of Teachers, said his union 

She also asked what percentage of about the scfiool. did not want 11-plui succewratS at 

bop and girls passed and failed the Mrs Seex was against the forma- named schools to be published, 
exam, how many parents appealed tion of “league tables” and for that “What we would nrobahlv 

the results and how many reason did not want the schools with 2 £ y a ?” e 

S wre successful. She was tola n.mtd in public. 005 K£.' 

.nn.tion w.s confident!. I . Mr fA E.di., ComervaUvt 


Pay offsets 
job loss 

Labour-controlled Durham County 
Council - which is at present facing 
industrial action by teachers - may 
use some of the cash earmarked to 
pay teachers’ salaries next year to 
offset the loss of jobs. 

The county council set aside 8 per 
cent for pay settlements, next year 
and cut its education budget by 
£4m. However, it now looks as if the 
teachers' pay settlement will be near- 
er 6 per cent. 

The cuts would have meant a 
worsening of the pupil/teacher ratio 
by a loss of 16o jobs above the 
number necessary to combat failing 
rolls. In addition, they have meant 
that teachers on long-term absence 
from secondary schools have not been 
replaced. 

. Members of the National Associa- 
tion of Schoolmasters/Union of 
Women Teachers have decided to 
take “no cover" action in protest over 
the cuts. 

So far their action has been re- 
stricted to five comprehensive schools 
in the county with the result (hat 
about four 20-strong groups of pupils 
had to be sent home from school last 
week. 


Hoping for floods 


>P in g 

oi brainwaves . . . 

Schools in the UK will soon receive 
Information and entry forms for this 
year’s Brainwave competition orga- 
nized by 77ie Times Educational Sup- 
plement and Hestalr Hope. Teachers 
are asked to submit ideas for a class- 
room aid to solve a specific problem, 
The competition was begun last 
year to recognize the Inventiveness of 
individual teachers and to Introduce 
new Ideas based directly on classroom 
experience. There are seven categor- 
ies: mathematics; aids for the hand- 
icapped; geography; home economics; 


science, 

There Is over £6,000 In prize 
money. Each category winner will 
receive £150 with £350 Tor the win- 
ning entrant’s school; there will be 
£75 for each runner-up and £175 for 
the school and from the category win- 
ner an overall winner will be chosen 
who will receive £500 and £1,500 for 
his school. 


“Carolyn, as I'm sure you will be this 
afternoon, has been impressed with 
the quality of today’s youth." 

Thus Miss Alison Mulcock intro- 
duced her team-mate, Miss Carolyn 
Bradley, from (he High School, 
Benconsfield, who was to open last 
Saturday’s public speaking competi- 
tion with an oration on Young Eng- 
land. 

And impressed we were. Through- 
out the long, hot afternoon in the 
Connaught Rooms, gentlemen pers- 
pired and ladies glowed but rhetoric 
and courtesy never flagged. 

After Carolyn hnd tackled today's 
youth - the best ever, she assured 
us, but woefully misrepresented by 
the media - brave Joan Clnfkc from 
St Peter’s School, Bournemouth, 
confronted drug abuse. 


Joan battled womanftilly with a series 
of tricky questions. How did wc rid 
society or this terrible diseosc? Did 
she distinguish between hard and soft 
drugs? Finally, her chairman came 
lo (he rescue with a smile that would 
open many village ffites In years (o 
come. 


“la my own expedience", she con- 
fided, ‘ r glue-snifflng in your own 
room can lead to n few puffs of 
marijuana." And from there, it whs 
but a Bhort stop to the hard drugs 
like heroin. Bournemouth has 
obviously gone to the dogs. 

Bf nirllae mm<4 a<ih rlAman ■! 


More than 400 people 
gathered in the Connaught 
Rooms, London, last Saturday 
to hear the national final of 
the English Speaking Union's 
public speaking competition. 
Now in its 22nd year, the 
competition attracted more 
than 1,000 entries, three-quar- 
ters of them from maintained 
schools. But, last Saturday, 
only eight teams were left . . . 

guish between hard and soft drugs? 
What about ime-pnrcnl families? 
Finally, her chairman came to the 
rescue with a voice and smile that 
would open many village ffites in 
years to come. 

“And now, unfortunately, lor l 
know Joan would love lo answer 
more questions on (his subject, we’ve 
nin out of time", she said. “Lovely 
personality’ 1 , suid the woman behind 
mo. 

After this earnest Itcginning Mr 
Mark Sowcrby from St Aldan's C ol 
E High School, Harrogate, intro- 
duced u light touch with n fokey 
series or unccdotcx uhout The Need 
for Ritual. 

But he was no slouch at the heavy 
stuff, either. Did ho agree (hut the 
truth of religion whs In the ritual? 


S d one questioner. Well, the 
ioIIc Church regarded rltunl hs 
the outward and visible sign of in- 
ward and spiritual grace, answered 


To advertise your 
courses please contact 
; John Ladbrook 
on 01*8371234, ; . 
'Extn. 7380 


1MX.R1 IS 
11 )( ( VI ION 
0(1 



he declared, had brought rihakod 
of die rain forest and into the C» 
naught Rooms. And (a nice hwt, 
this), he would like to thank Ufa, 
nut ns a ritual ... but as a «j 
great pleasure. 

The winners came from St Bn- 
nard’s Convent High School. Weg- 
cliffe-on-Sca, Essex. Their uw 
speaker was Miss Sally Paviov.vtn 
leapt to the front of the platform k> 
toll us about the evils of utifinl 
insemination. Who could say ria 
dabbling in genetics might lead to 1 
Miss Pfiviour had a good lint in 
answering dim questions. Did & 
believe, asked one sleepy member d 
the audience, that artificial iruemtu- 
tiou could leud to unpredictable re- 
sults? "Sir", she replied triumph# 
ly, “1 must have succeeded in if 
very mission!" • 

But the individual winner « at 
National Public Speaking Cup w 
Miss Lisa Tomlinson from Penrox 
College. Culwyn IJay. Miss Trow 
son had two great advantages: * 
could stand still without RUdlnu 
speii k slowly and clearly will#*, 
sounding like Mrs Thatcher - 
obviously n girl who will go far. .. 


Mlw Tomlinson hud two great • 
ndvunlngcsi aho could stand sum , 
without fiddling and speak jloj^i" 
dearly without Kouncllng Bko Mrs 
Thatcher - obviously a girt whorii 
go far. She made a dear aao_ 
persuasive speech la hvour of . 
Intemnliuuul conscience. 


Electronics I ‘Uganda’ skipper dies on way to Falklands 

. D J.. n!J iL. in ... I l__ .. n V 


gets a 

pleasant 

shock 


Captain Brian Biddick. the 47-year-old 
skipper of the educational cruise ship, 
the SS Uganda, has died after being 
taken ill on his way to the Falkland 
Islands. 


tioned by the Government as a hos- with the Uganda, 
pltal ship, and was then flown to the 6 

RAF hospital at Wroughton, Wilt- •Teachers and c 
shire, where he died. five erlumfinnai 


• Teachers and children booked on 
five educational cruises on the Usan- 

rlo Iia.ia L. >.IJ .. l.. . . 6 


I One of the country's largest GCE 
F examining bodies, the Associated 
: Examining Board, has disclosed that 
i noie than seven times the originally 
; expected number of candidates wifi 
kt taking its first O level exumina- 
! in electronics. 

Mr John Day, AEB secretory 
pneral said: “Since this is an O level 
m and these are times of financial 
^fliioancy for schools and colleges, 
w thought we might have nn inilinl 
atry of araund 250 candidates. 

But the actual totnl lifts turned 
^ D b* ! L872 - a remarkable figure 
■ m, the circumstances and one 
jwn cteiiriy reflects the fuct that 
«JJepu recognize this as a vitnl sub- 

JJe candidates come from alt 
K? 7 s .‘ al ° aiul independent 
i cdiiciiloii colleges, 
Wevening classes and hobby clubs. 

JkEJW fcnu,re of this AF.D 
JgfJj ,he "systems" approach 

ISfihS? fll 1 ,e Way cluc ‘rnnlcs is 
Win industry. • • 

JTint final stages «r the course 
22! v BW n choice between spe- 
d ? Mu<i * cs fluted to telc- 
wdio and television- 
^wrapuilng. . Bgt - (he pomilur 

ySJK"? »W* year’s first butch 
emrants has been commitinn - 


Is,ands - . first served in the dTh 

Captain Biddick, who had been 5S? 5 a 5 ct "^cancelled, P 

captain of the ship since December, J aeSScf with cancel i ed cruise s would have 
1979, lived in Cornwall, and leaves a StionahSiJe '‘Jhfo? to Wife ™ token placebetween April 17 and 

wife and two children. He had an Sm SmnmJder 5 1TJS J S! e u u A w .S ,I ! d » available 

abdominal operotion aboard the K ESf L?i ^ ^”*5 ther f W,U opportunities 

Uganda, which hBd been reauisi- ffnf.SS'SSLSr'l* Londpn and to transfer to later cruises or to those 

6 ' , requlsl Canberra before ta king up his post due to take placn in spring, 1983 

Candidates up, I M ni p man , 

standard down i ' 

A five-fold increase in the number of T||| 

pupils taking A level general studies ■ I I IVm/I I 

lins coincided with n sharp decline in 
the overall standard of their work, 
an examining board reported this 
week. . 

While candidates “shine" in one m. 
two parts of the examination i: ‘'8rFen ‘ Castos widerange ofsaentific 

those closely related lo the other - calaalators from sjmplebasic models 

subjects they arc taking for A level ~ to highly sophisticated program- . 



Entries must be received fay Octo- 
ber IS, 1982, end entry forms can be 
obtained from: The Brainwave 

Aw Ards 1982, The Marketing Depart- 
ment, Hestalr Hope Ltd, Freepost, St 
Philip’s Drive, Royton, Oldham OL2 
6BR. 


More science 

fortessjripney 


J? *iJ Kcn compuiing - 
JSlS® ABP snys, because of 
»oiKBJw ly 8,v ’ n t0 R luderils to 




nervous when it cjne o 


TH£ RAPID HESULTS COLLEGE 


subjects they arc taking for A level - 
they produce “very interior work” in 
the others, Oxford’s Delegacy of 
Local Examinations says in its report 
for 1981. 

“I found in my marking that many 
candidates had no more knowledge 
of ihc subject they were handling 
than (he mnn in (he street, "-said- one 
examiner, commenting on the law, 
order and government section of the 
examination. 

The examiners point out that the 
“real value" of general studies lies in 
the encouragement it gives pupils to 
study subjects outside the narrow re- 
mit of their A level course. 

“We feel very strongly that the 
cducntionul value of this subject de- 
pends henvily on its width; and we 
hope that . . . there will be a sub- 
stontlRl improvement in the overaji , 
quality of the work done by candf- 
dates outside (heir special fields," the 
report says. . '. • ' . ; 

" Ideas to sell 

energy saving 

, , Pupils in Britain’s secondary schools 

“SSL 8 ? f in ‘egn»tlng have been invited to devise ways of 
n into ordinary persuading the public to use. energy 
in a book Dub- more efficiently. " . ' , 

Launching the Department oi 
Energy’s third national schools com- 
petition for energy conservation, Mr 
David MeUor. Under-Secretary of 
' State for Energy, said: More era- 
eerfjf In the cient use of energy will save money 
bed last De- in our schools, homes arid at wore 
the result ot and will make these resources last 

f -‘bV SS, a n ^!L ProJfcJ* snon- longer.” ' ' n 

of Educn- *inc competition is open to aJi , 
pupils from 12 to 16 years in schools •. 
in the UK and in British Forces 
schools overseas. Teams udung part 
.will carry out research mto some or 
eqergy. conservation. 


^ I Caaiols wide range ofsaentific 

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C,, W n j . of new syllabus 

JS f "W-hy n ‘Otal of £12,000 

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DE BUI MAMS. 
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Ill- 



Block grant idea 
heightens fears of 
centralized control 


by Sarah Bayliss 

Local government leaders huve accountability or accent any increase 
warned against separate funding for in central influence when no case is 
the education service, an idea put forward to justify such a major 
attracting interest in Whitehall. fundamental chance/ 

Mr John Horrell, Conservative The ACC considers that a separate 
chairman of the Association of J*J°“ grant on top of the present 
County Councils, argued in a recent block grant system would create 
statement that an education block “appalling" complications, particular- 
grant would result in more central ty if targets and grant penalties were 
control and rob local government of to be present in both systems, 
its responsibility to decide levels of Mr Jack Smart, Labour chairman 
spending nnd provision between uN °f tin-* Association of Metropolitan 
the services. Authorities, warned last week that 

"We strongly oppose any chances th ? ?? v 7 nmc,,E J vou,d 1 use 8 «l»- 
which will lead to a loss or K 2? educotton in a 

accountability. The education service E m h cLnrt?^ effectively set mux- 
must remain under the contra] of the fS»? rtm Sp Sl1 ng , e , ve u S - ‘Jh* only 
locally elected representatives who JduoSKn thl * ? be efl lo loca! 

are close to the people they serve. would be t0 

able to judge local needs and cir- 12K standards, he said. "Any 



Government 
targets not j 

being met I 

by Richard Garner 

i l ocal education authorities y e - 
! likely m meet Government Si * 

' ,n f ,ar 8Cts by closing rtJSi 
! school classrooms, accorffiSj 
formation from l.e.a.s rfSj 

si. 

nie NAHT, Which hu ^ 

meat s figures as “unrealistic" 

Sir Keith Joseph, the Edna* 
Secretary, expects authorities to M 
more than one million school pbn 
by March 19H4 because of the 
pupils. “ 

The NAHT has received mfe 
indicating that authorities an *£! 


ly to meet the targets. Amonjfe 
authorities are: Buckinilaafe ; 
East Sussex, GloucestenhS, fail ; 
amntonshire, Nottinahamshire, D» : 
byshirc, Lancashire, Wakefield, B* | 


able to judge local needs cir- “J*®*' SI ? naara s, ‘ he said. "Any ' r ' , . . 

Ksac responsib,e for SM31BB y.«W r r.r» £ 

■ ,o p!,n,,,ve sct,on agamst iSe off ° nd - s ? m v* fc'isa'sss asa 15 tjssn.xzxz t s 

have not yet discussed the Gw* 


iutai hu Minus uauuii, . ... 

*«*. *n j lo punitive 

We will do pur utmost to per- ing | e a " 
suade the Government that things The 'am 
must remain this way. 65 


education got a 1(» ^pe^ant^grant j Cy for lhc p, /i^ ct by , form,n 8 » company and Issuing a ment’s targets 

-• « — sharc Prospectus, but donors were told, quite frankly, that they would not be Mr David 


nbie, and they designed the three-whecicd, two-seated car to scale. 
J ®wi l gel In 11," says Diek Barker, their headmaster. 


“Any weakening of local govern- instead of the current 56 ocr~ccm *— — . — — , ... 

ment will lead to a strengthening of there wodld be a reduction^ rate! |e SSy ?S d £ n fc 

central government, central authority of £3.845m and a 3.7 pence in the n? ,, BP Bulldacar competition Is organized with RKMR under BP . 

wonM e !2 r «! , Wc fe , el P°»nJ r|, M ifl income tax or a 3.9 per c chool Yo ! | !l (’ ^ he J ne : J hc , nna,s will be held at the Army’s * hc tUl 'gcls were regarded by tod 

would be quite wrong to change local cent incrense in VAT. f Elec,r,cfll Hnd Mechanical Engineering at Bordon, Hampshire. In councils us ‘'valid” or “just u b 

— ucioocr. r m ^ nf „f tuichrni iMnbbJ* 


Mr David Hart, NAHT pad 
secretary, said he had written fob ; 
Department of Education ufeji 


October. 


Keep coaching and refereeing out of CSEs 


SSffirSES* £•££»¥ W 

• te -- re P ort - rom tI,e ScIl0o,s Coun - exam subject with a substantial body 


cil PE committee. 

It also criticises teachers of the 


subject, for being overgenerous .in unawmcofVtandardsand T.nsure of syllabuses 


m V % d .^° St do “ b | ed ' f rom 224 A study last ycur among 414 men 
[J Ji 2, Syllabuses which were entire- PE teachers showed n stmrisingly 

exam subject with a sub’sta’nt!al"hnrf« . ro ;5 e f [9. m 86 137 in the large number unaware of where to 

of leachcrsopposed tothcldefl^ SSSaiE?? 1 while 1 0 f uld °or pursuits gut help with the Introduction of 
MXaloX syllabuses increased from 31 to 56. CSE examinations. Out of 341 

moderators nave round 1 1 teachers Yet the committee found in many teachers in schools where PE win. not 


ment of wishful thinking ’. j 
He added: “Sir Keith also j 
that it cost £78 a year to reiaiii i 
surplus place in a primary school ill 
£137 for one in a secondary school; 
But one authority - Gloucwteisfe-, 
has told us it does not accept M 
accuracy of those figures.'’ 


•• ..... ««._ . 


syllabuses aims and objec- examined only 29 per cent were 
212 ■ ■ j u, »! c p \p examine in any aware that they could act help from 
form and which will remain amongst the exam boards. 

VMM ntdltii ‘KnMnH FnJ 


People 


It says the point of pupils re- 
fereeing or coaching as port of their 
C8E examination should be ques- 
tioned. Both activities are lime- con- 


suming and there Is uncertainty ab- 
out the level .of performance ex- 
pected. . . - 


The report adds: "While analysis' 
of rules, technique^ and tactics is 
appropriate It Is dpubtful whether' 
the assessment of pupils in refereeing 
and coaching is apj3iiaible. , ' : ! ; 



, t . . xiuuuhih vabiii uvaiug. 

tno many hoped for concomitants of r- 

education. Toe re seems a need for a Equally sunrising, out of the 73 cj- nu V cr Wrlehl a retired dih 
more common policy here.” wl |° did have examinations in "i bclhc new M 

While only 14 syllabuses were i ,lelr Kll ?° t, onl / 4l] ccnl wcr « rh ist’s Colkae cSSbriST-Th 
wholly, practical with no theoretical »Ti«o °fi Q uras ? «"*?' .uppoimmeni follows a prolonged* 

component nt all, moderators fuumi .1 ™ Clt ,p Lu ni, i u,lc mnl stiugalc between suppoiteB:d 
the content of both sections was * i , , . f* nave not been v: r Oliver nnd nf ihe rival camfi®. 

frfuansftt'nw: « s^tsfajs# 

.ifATrtsjryaas aF a srs^" 

or Jnciudes coaching by the pupil" 8 ' ■ ^ 

Another complaint of moderators, _ i> r Roirerl .Smith has been appotij 

says (ne report, is Of the Inek nF b'Ynmlnntluti* it, H liu»;«.r ,\t K inocimi Po 


_ Syllabuses “are o'ften not aimed at 
the correct level, says the committee 
which also found ihat teachers .In- 


Lodge 

Most of the 14 region al exnniina- 


examination 


this summer. 


- l)r Roirerl Smith has been ap 


.nUNSF. CQn, P ln * nt 0/ moderators, — i#r Kown arann hum 

mvfhinS El ■ of t! !f. ln ? k of i« physical fttmntUm director of Kingston Po 

L I ?..i I> “P i A s / hcor y a, jd rfi ! at€<l nrca *\ A re|wrt from the [rum September L jlfcis si 


original in pupils’ theory 
otn files nnd projects con- 


torested in Introducjrig PE u a’cSE lion boards- had nnnmv^ * k-j— »„■ 

• subjoci were largely .Ignorant of hpw syllabuses by 1974. between 1976-80 SL? f rom ,. teac hors’ 
to go about It.; the iiumbeT if "° « or b 99 ks . « ad show little per- 


lo go about it. 


ie number of inode 3 syllabuses so'rial cont/lbution/ 


ncil physical earn 
Schools Council 


Great Portland St, London, Wl. 


CROSSWORD 

by MACHIWELLI 








giungmeiiyinMKiBBiitB 

MBffiHBieBBiiaiiUiHNMinnn 


aaiBHiia «iBni 


•aHHann&aiiHiHnaaBiffiaR 


88 Violu. lacognlta, wilt flat OrsHw in (ha uid (4) 

M Vatsals pm about - u Ivuiaa to tha south (B) 

• W Uouien Mil’s oar (i wnwkod, = a rwtoa him vuohleBa (ito 
» Oowmw wt short Uw laRghtor (4) . . 

■ -5 fs?sas,srjx>.f“* 

Yn. l’dj usat all off (B) 1 ' : -' 

; « h vtaoratloq. iCqut leMfar |* hirood, ewh head Is bowqd (6) 
« Pop slntto.. head lost in amass af.aliig8y hair ft: 

4B Ouis of ofesnoe could provldo quartette with a inner (16) 

48 awe-oraft lands in the Bast ladies: tnpiasl trees searete 

It (G) ■ 

49 Oefcjro Initial adjustmaat. hunter loses 85 minutes ( 4 ) 

; -60 Treat metal in the old-fashioned way - not slumlhliim (4) 

, , ft! Suffering raids on rat4a <7) , ’ . > 

. ; K Nlckie^en «ohoes a son«(4) : ' : 

1 Mwd.ft*: she garjleo 'ftj 

/ (S> ./.»■ ' 

1 V -. 'j' : ' 

;5t Rdp^.l^Ui^poreuaed «a«*(i) 

■- ? • . 

•: ; do*H ; V. • 

> *' Ap,e ® pul 00 a1ot ofw «W't -could be * 

• ’ pRiniBl (8) • • > 


unu inuicu nrem. report Irani the aepiemnor 1. iw 

secondary working natty of the Professor of Physical nicolroiww 
hchools Council physical education Dean of Engineering al Soiitwapp 
committee. Schools Council 160 University. 1 . 

Great Portland Si, London, Wl. — — 

Mrs Vhmettc Melbourne, l?,X 

* been appointed head of PhylP[*yff 

nblng a irrt - it was ttaep <f« School. Kcnllsll Town. She fJP 

TO?,o altar run l, P thc ncw oppoiniment M S#Jj 

ling lnoiled mo into • frensy (9) ber 1 ■ MelboiUnCj 

jg. giving riBo m spitBM Riiaaip m miioro ( 8) present deputy hen , 
ipaiiy by rotaiiera or the Luvmi (4j Abney primary school, *T. 

d extoot the stripper I employed 10 strip • Newington. =^ | 


87 See me olimblng a tree - It was Bleep (5) 

88 Burst Into aong (5) 

81 Poailval it is vain to alter (ID) 

83 Brain- washing lnoiled mo into a frensy (9 » 

5 * 2 X 22 &JKZ* rlB0 . ln * 00,,0 *‘° w 

36 Used principally by reuilera nf the Luvmi (4) 

37 To a limited extont tho atrlpper I employed to strip • 

undressed (4) v 

t> ... . * _ . 


unqniaeota] „ . 

5 2!2!2 ta * n “4 ‘n France m Mrs Josephine 

J? 2 ??!“? wppUod ^ » h0 c««is»artM (5) | jas been appointed head 

41 Book a UK* most of. year to rami (8) Joseph’s Roman CM* 




‘Apiwre-;*;- 

', 8 ptd-r|iA(ori6d echMl 'gyinrialrtids atiipo 

1 • » 'Vmy. ..L & n twT i.jwiluU. Lr Lmw'M’ 


|^| | 


8 8e6elhty liinU the distribution- cftnwble'flQi ' - . , 

• f : Aff atoqi, waned yalkor wbot tut (4) ' ' 

, • J J.JJJ Wtmcimt toptpyide for a poet m I 

. 6 -It «w Ujb. ode shade to haimioaiss (4) 

• ^.^41*8. glided sawoibty (4) 

.,.40 • AnhiloetusA h^tjm,oha^p«,«y- B (B) 


; 18. WpqWir, to ^ :• -« 

. % ■ ; ■ :/ l ; ; ' * 

M V(n :■ (« ?• " ' .:■■■ ^ 


40 Other tanks supplied by tho Corwlaaviat (B) 

41 Book it lakes most of a year to read (8) 

44 Cotton on to sharp girl (7) 

46 Dislnollned to noya beoauso of opposite centre -balf (B) 

47 Previma leader of comirmniiy (0) 

68 Husbands are first to approve (4) 

.63 Potjnrep U, shortly to (11 b (4) 

. M Otherwise a woil-brdd youpg lady? Not II (4) 

v ’. ! 1 •. 

• <*■** ‘■••'rftoa CtoeaWord Club's 

huoijto msgastoo Creworrf. u to ifiiS okutb'a 'asoond' pucsle. 

^ahSr ^ k , U ** S “ ***' to, 

^i^LJS m] ii:T ner '^ pa “t*™* involving aoma 
Wnd of giomlpk.. The firm prise fbr this main Quids to s 
, Compact Edition at Tie Oxford ErngUsH fMctiS 41? (or MS.B0). 

^ c * 0MTOriB «>to kind, you 

may like to oonsld^ joiaing the Crossword ClUb. Plain send 

• Uie QODpco for myn intonpatlon. Thia ooges with a uupto 
Craamrora, plus a copy oT a booklet w« call out handbook. Or 

'Bfiyfk wedtayouritoUiiSito.ij*^,.-. 

SJJSJre 0nr "w* »rewlpilaB.4lS3iii 

e7 “ <£8 ' C0 avmsBM). Ihe ototiiwdus for 

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□ I wwi ie M Htitm,, lie tyui, 

** • *W»r CWiwrow mcwWM 


Mrs Josephine s P* n * wic ^ t( fij*ci 
has been appointed head 
St Joseph’s Roman CajhohcnHW 
school, Camberwell, 
the beginning of this term- 0 
previously head of the injan ogP 
ment of St Andrew’s p ^ 
school, Streatharrl. • 



Sir Richard OWV 
be the iww cMn"}" • ^ 
gineering Industry T 

ffomjfewlicnhe^a 

from Uri Scanlon, who ^ 

Sir Richard wrechairm^s 

Manpower . Scmces. 
from 1976 to 198*.. 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


School to work 


JjJJJpoolis preparing to cut back 
spending on its young people despite 
scathing HMI criticism of the existing 
provision. The city’s minority Liberal 
Jdmlnistration is overriding its 
education committee as well as reduc- 
ing funds for the colleges and aid to 
inner city voluntary youth projects. 

Thecntidsms of FE and youth pro- 
vision in the Inspectors’ loxteth re- 
port, published Inst week, have been 
Inevitably overshadowed by its com- 
ments on ihe city’s schools following 
the riots at St Saviour’s primary 

school. 

But the sections which deni with 
(he over- 16s arc the most condemna- 
tory in the report and arc druwing 
the most blood from the politicians. 

At their meeting with the Educa- 
tion and environment secretaries 
nest week the Liberal council lender, 
Sir Trevor Jones and thc former 
education committee chairman. 
Councillor Mike Storey, will sav that 
while they accept thnt most nf whnt 
Ibe Inspectors report about the 
school system is factually correct, 
their comments on the authority's 
jouth provision are outrageously un- 

Tbe report accuses the authority of: 

• Failing to develop a policy for the 
16-I9s; 

• Starving the colleges of resources 
they need for expansion and rede- ' 

e enf and distracting them with 9 
er work that leads to no ac- 
lioii: 

• Creating weaknesses in its com- ' 
Bunily education deparlmenl which * 
block any effective policy; r 

• Hampering voluntary youth work c 
by creating uncertainties about con- 
llnued funding; , 

The Liberal leaders agree with thc n 
inspectors’ charge that the failure to 
rationalize the schools sector and lb- 
19 education has wasted money r, 
with is needed for the colleges. ; 
But they blame this on teacher f 
unions and other parties on the - 


Liverpool spurns HMI 
and plans further cute 


close particular schools. P S t0 J* education committee chair- 


stvStS 

S5s*«ffs£ 


man teacher Mike Storey, With 
another Liberal councillor. The 
change was made at Tuesday's 
Muncil meeting, when Ihe Liber- 
SJSMJ 0 r en,ain «" offlee 


, o— "ii11.11 uncn araws snidmre ba 0 . , u „ i in omce 

sai-si; -s-S SMr,r^ uta “ r - 

courses for ,T_,™ n « e °t ._The new education chairman 


ZtSmS PartlCUlflr loca,Iti « e ^°h 

nmnth° r ,gno [ ,n 8 ,helr assessment 18 
J2!| h * too little was being 

spent on FE when the Government 
has cut back Its block grant to the 
impoverished city. 

fhI? r >h Stt?rey told The TES week 
that the inspectors were, in any case 

JJJ ®f. da,c wth their facts. "\^ have 
actually overspent this year, so FE 

rpiff UFe has . not remained level in 
re . E J l er ms as they allege". And he 
added that the level of spending was 
being maintained next year. 8 

But, in fact, the education depart- 
ment has since admitted that well 
over three quarters of the £400,000 
overspending" in non-advanced FE is 
not an increase in money spent on the 
college, but a dop In the income which 
it had expected to get from the DBS for 
students from outside the city, whose 
numbers have fallen drastically. 

And although the education com- 
mittee has fought off a proposal by a 
finance working party to lop 
£1,200,000 off the FE budget for next 
year, spending will not stay at this 
year’s level. The council has insisted on 


-y -HOC urw, 

Ur Di 1 e 'L e t ucat,on chairman, 

K «"P> Is a tough- 
mjnded estate agent who has pre- 
headed the housing com- 
mittee. Mr Storey Is understood 
jo nave stood down because he is 
bMondng the head of a school in 


Strong discipline urged 

pSSLfcSlr— SL5r«?SB£ 

linn Ivf 5 . noo ! s w,ll ‘ 11 nigh propnr- matim suys. 

wged ihi^wlSs'llie hest lnng iS |h H 5. is hl f l,, .>' critical of ihe roie of 
% to lielp black younusters ,hc LommTssion for Racial Equality 

Inaian children should also L" ™ ducln 8 r »lhcr than improving 
stop thinking that luck or sysieinuiic i CIJl1 harn ) on J' hy ,hc onc-si&dness 
ynnjiiiaiion were to blume for any " M,mc |,r ,ls puWicationfci* "^«**' 
touflllonal failure, unci he more Uc- n,sn L-riliciaM-s the “half-bnked 
araimed to' succeed. recomnieiiiiations of the Govern- 

J jjreicr education officer sun- nwitt-appointcd Rumptoa Committee 
HS 11 [his approach lo rnce riots Inquiry into the undcr-achicvo- 
'Sf? U i Cal !.? n I s much sounder than inbnl t,f Wcsl Illtlll,n children in Brll- 
^■Mked iwommonclntlons for ish “to** 1 *- Mr Parlinalon says it is 
wre binck lenchcrs, sehuol uov- 'P“*cntiiilly dLwstrous H that Ramp 
"ypn. inspectors nnd enruorK ,on should have refused to face real 

^ ,mu uiru '- r! ’ fty nnd presnih.' slops for iho res 

•g? G °o r f FartlngUm. u former ,,mid,,n ,,f orderly classrooms, 

|L r ast ? r tojll education officer in Me says there is clour evidence 
a ,5 n b ” rou 8b “f Filling, fs ilia! some employers - usually those 
^ ure r in Stiuth «i u small scale in service industries 
"Wridnd ■ " do (,iscr i mfnatc against non-white 

MsJj* A n lhc Bulletin uf the jab applicants. Employers should re- 
for Educational main ‘cokiur-blintf 1 ’ and refuse to 

siiii ,c ' left-wing adopt preferential policies which 

fc ljfe i!«f 0or fl uali jy teuehers in seek to secure group parity. 

•S. for Sum' . . [ ,e I,dmits i s ,fk0| y i° result ln 8 


f women try to be super 


»re likely to face 
’ and ma ny are type- 

JV^men researchers has 


woman m«v 

“unfemi- 

itUv i y »• Ihey say. But 
MSvS'-K Mrisidered .& posf- 
■r? 8 man.. 

MRS "omen who try 
carccr are 
of world-wide 
^ SuJ?v» U8 l dfa 7>min«iion 

SSBS£““ in 

^Jipd disadvantages 
lad^eS iP' t0 climb the 

Sl E dl (>ne r “ k 

ma " :Th ' 


Women ucadcmics teqd to assume 
thnt they must equal or surpass their 
male counterparts. , A mediocre 
woman seldom readies lb? same 
ranks as a mediocre man- Recogniz- 
ing this, “women are tempted to try 
to do it all - to be successful both at 
a career and at being wife and 
mother,” researchers say. 

Taking on all roles is likely to lead 
to what lias been termed “the super- 
woman syndrome”. Women who try 

to be academic superwomen, but 

cannot do it all, pay the price: frus- 
tration with, arid’ resentment to- 
wards, thc university, the family ana 
the broader society. . 

What women fail to recogmre is 
that the most “successful" men have 
not siihultancously excelled at an 
these tasks cither. 


■ o — “ u» h scnooi in 

a neighbouring authority. He re- 
fader thC Ubfira,s ’ deputy 


a smaller cut, which means that, after 

there wi,! be 
£300,000 less for the colleges. They will 
H expected to make good £150,000 of 
this by spending less on tlfe courses 
tney run for the voune unemnlnunH 


j — ” r—** manpuwer ser- 

vices Commission. 

A similar sum will have to be 
saved on college refectories - and is 
hkely to mean cutting catering staff; 
and the rest will have to come from 
books, furmture, and equipment. 

. Mr Storey and his colleagues re- 
ject altogether the Inspectors 1 attack 
on their handiina of youth work, and 
m particular their allegation that be- 
cause there is no prindpal youth 
officer and, at present none in the 
job of assislanl director for commun- 
ity education, policy development 


I criticism 

» for young 

1 

ho -Efp °l n :ontinuit y w innovation”. 

Mr Storey says that they have not 
been able to advertize thc post until 

tarwh/fh lhC “ sistant direc- 

he ^?hoiu S K fflC, 2 ^ m ° Vi!d 0ver 10 

branch is actffally doing 

b0 *b w ell for the moment. 8 
-,, l ; e . de . F ? nds vigorously the coun- 
cil s decision made a year ago to 

5™* grants to arountf 300 
most of 

E 1 "^ ,nner city, and denies 

S£iv ?? n *A su 88estian that this is 
likely to reduce the aid. 

The Inspectors claim that the long 
drawn-out review, which is not basef 
on any clear-stared criteria. , is caus- 
ng uncertainty and worsening reln- 
onslups with the youth orfaniza- 

fchSk “fV elied on far nearly 
f lhe . c ' l y provision. 

Mr Storey and Sir Trevor insist 
mat only four or five projects have 
beon seriously affected by J decisions 
to cut their aid, and that another 17 
or so have had smaller cuts. 

The money is likely to be switched 
to projects m deprived districts in the 
° u *? r “f? 5 .°f Liverpool, Mr Storey 
says, and insists that it is time this was 
done. On any calculation of depriva- 
tion, it Is the outer city which is top of 
the league for the next lot of riots'" he 
warns. 

The local National Association of 
Teachers in Further and Higher 
Education and the voiuniary orga- 
nizations are welcoming the HMI re- 
port , and say that it states what most of 
those working with youngsters know to ! 
be .the truth. 

Mr Derek Betts, NATFHE’s re- , 


Edited by Mark Jackson 

gional officer, says that thc authority 

bflL frE y ii hu r Dff ,he res l»nsl- 
ih^lrar !?„“ far a , s il can on to 
Co Nege staff, he says, ore 
desperately anxious for a chance lo 

Sie n^ rV H Ce lra L nin g *° Prepare for 
thpm n i de ?, Q I! ds being made on 
them, and will be deHahtcd that the 
Inspectors have exposed that author- 
■ty ® failure to provide it. 

Opinions in the college common 
rooms arc not, however, usuS- 
mous as Mr Betts might like. While 
woman lecturer said that 
staff who wanted to do somethine 
practical to help the city’s voune 
were becoming demoralized by thl 
5 du< L all °£. department’s inability to 

rithSS?! i xccpt bombard them 
^ b more and more pnper and proc- 

snid *h\f thi d ? e ' a8ed vi “ Principal 
unreauSi c . ,hc were b ''"B 

He said: "We’re putting on 
gJjJJJ because we’ve got the spare 
facilities and the MSC has got the 
money. But there’s not much evi- 

fhem 6 TW theSC y° un « sters want 
y ve grown up W iih fho 

°f bving by casual labour like 
their parents and getting monev 
where they can. The last thmg they’}? 
do fs to knuckle down to anything 
they don’t have to.” y g 

vnufh 6 - n Kflnc * w . ho coordinates 
youth and community activities for 

iiJL L,ver P° o1 wuncif of socinl ser- 
vree says that the Inspectors have, if 
anything, understated die harm being 
( ,° ne n y° uth Projects. Apart from 

keL SL CU * tS - TOUnc| J bas not 
kept its grants m line with inflation, 

And Ms practice of Freezing posts 
when a voluntary worker * leaves 

bv C oi« S”?!! pro J ec | s which are run 
one «*»o people. Whatever Mr 

atorev OellPVPK coin- U. V . 


- * ’ wuuuuy aDie 10 make 

® f d 5J : ' si J? 11 Bn y longer or even, much 
matt bR1e * 0 bundle even routine 



Address 


Local Education Authority. 


The competition Is open fo children between the ages of 12 and 16 
on let September 1962. Completed registration cards must be ' 
fettled by 30th September 1982. . . . 




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IB 


OVKRSI'AS THK TIMES 


West Germany/Susannali Kirkman 


i. • ] 
!’ i ' I 


J J i s 

U . ' 


Alienated youth cause concern 


BONN: An all-party commission has 
recommended sweeping legal and so- 
cial reforms to improve the strained 
and sometimes violent relations be- 
tween West German young people 
and the state. 

Confrontation and hostility huve 
mounted over the oast 18 months ns 
police have evicted young squatters 
and clashed with demonstrators. 

Government and opposition are 
alarmed at the increasing alienation 
of young people from traditional 
political parties and institutions. A 
government survey last year revealed 
that 30 per cent of young West Ger- 
mans are in favour of using “extra 
parliamentary means to achieve re- 
forms.” Only 13 per cent feel repre- 
sented by either government or 
opposition parties. 

As (he results of the recent state 
elections in Schleswig- Holstein indi- 
cated. many young people arc more 
attracted to the environmentalist 
Green Party, which supports pacifist 
and ecologist ideals. As well as gain- 
ing more seats in the Schleswig-Hol- 
stein Parliament than the liberal Free 
Democrat Party, the junior govern- 
ment coalition partner, the Green 
Party has also won representation in 
the West Berlin government and in 
two other state parliaments, largely 
thanks to youthful defectors from the 
main political parties. 

The commission which has been 
examining “Youth Protest in a 
Democratic Society" has suggested a 
“squatters* amnesty" legalizing the 
occupation of empty property, which 
would remove a major source of 
confrontation between young people 
and the state. 


!ftl| 



West Berlin police arrest a young 
anti-nuclear demonstrator. 


Rioting broke out in 20 German 
cities one night last August following 
a man's death during a police opera- 
tion to clear squatters from houses in 
West Berlin. Nationwide, 100 police- 
men were injured and many demon- 
strators arrested. 

Compulsory military service is 
another cause of friction between 
youth and state. With the growth of 
the anti-nudear peace movement, 
the number of conscientious objec- 
tors rose from 45,000 in 1979 to 
58,000 last year. 

At present, all conscientious ob- 
jectors have to undergo examination 


Trawl 


amazing value 


__ SCHOOL 

SKIING HOLIDAYS 

ItSaSSfissssBsao. 1 

I ISafe. — £199 I 

1 ,Jt 


ft you wou/d like dotaiteo/ time fufiy 

SUfmvisad; programmed. tMiesslonaify. 

run end InchofvBly prked Schools . BWI 

advent tiro hot/day a, pfaasa return the ' ■H TAJk; cHf 

coupon Mow |H&;- raByjgfl 

HOLIDAYS. 

. m ^^3 Ur ^ 0 ' oxon - 0XB4QJ - 

. your colour Brochure - 

. Nemo.** i.~ r ...» j. 

' Schi»L • 

_ • 


iK ; . : 



: , FREEPOST, 32 RNlljfJR, / 





i.,.r to (M5t3ni ouroxcMsiv&v •: . 

r 1983SCHOOLS BROCHURE 

':**■ 'em .mm tmm mm licyrour^Nb aSTUftftTftii^&sr si aif . 'em* mm 'mm 

; BR 0 O 1 URB .. V/x! 

i Jr,':. ;-;;!, 

JL .Mi •: liijifc' - 'Ijj^ VtJjl ; 

'-'.v ‘ /> V:' v ; ^/:c: :fj : t.) 


V.-v.s.;: 


j. 


‘ ’J- 


tiy ns many as three different tribun- 
als to gain exemption from militarv 
service. The commission advises in- 
stead (hat all conscientious objectors 
should do a form of social service 
Insling up to two years. Military ser- 
vice tioriiuiiiy lust' 15 months. 

The commission's report has stres- 
sed that much of the conflict be- 
tween youth and the stale steins 
from (lie growing fear of war among 
young people; it urges the govern- 
ment to increase its efforts to achieve 
multilateral disarmament. 

Members of the commission also' 
recognised young people's deep con- 
cern for the environment. New in- 
dustrial production methods should 
be developed with conservation in 
mind, according to the report. 

Over (he last six months, youth 
protest lias focused on the proposed 
construction of a third runway for 
Frankfurt Airport, which would en- 
tail the destruction of an ancient 
forest. 

anxie- 
wKich has 
3Y over 30 per cent among the 
under 20s during the past year, the 
commission has proposed the intro- 
duction of measures to create more 
job and training opportunities. The 
report also recommends that teena- 
gers should run their own youth 
clubs and schools should place more 
emphasis on community spirit. 

But it is unlikely that West Ger- 
man youngsters wifi accept the com- 
mission's olive brand). Previous 
attempts by politicians at "a dialogue 
with youth'' have only met with dis- 
trust and increased disillusionment. 


Acknowledging the growing 
ty about unemployment, wh! 
nsen by over 30 per cent amc 


Lsmel/ltenny Moms 

Support for 
kindergartens 

JERUSALEM: Mr r.vulun 11a miner, 
Minister of Education, has approved 
a ministry committee recommenda- 
tion to Institute Free prc-compiiisnry 
kindergartens Fur 3 to 4-vcnr-olds; It 
Is expected to begin during the next 
school year. Until now, only compul- 
sory klndergurlciiH For 5 in h-y ear- 
olds huve been Free. 

Parents who hate sent their chil- 
dren to municipal or state pre-enm- 
i pulsory kindergartens (some 90 per 
cent oF children uitend) have had to 
pay tuition Fees slightly steeper than 
annual university fees (which are, 
admittedly, low). This year, annual 
fees per child worked out at about 
J£160— £210. 

Children oF the country's poorest 
It) per cent have been kept away by 
the Fees, thus assuring their more 
difficult Integration Into later educa- 
tion. 

Mr Hammer Is to table the prop- 
osal In the cabinet, providing for the 
added cost of Tree prc-compulsory 
kindergarten by a slight Increase in 
social security contributions. Such in- 
creases would add the equivalent of 
about £37m to (he treasury, ministry 
officials hove calculated. 

At present, the Education Ministry 
Is studying another nroposal by Mr 
Michael Gur, chief economist, to 
compel pupils to do maintenance and 
cleaning chores to reduce school and 
ministry expenses. The ministry be- 
lieves that doing chores will instil 
■“values" In pupils, such as the merit 
of work, respect For property and 
'cleanliness. Each pupil would spend a 
■few hours working once a month. 


* Abrnham — 

Three die in 

language riots 

u«d by teachers m the sou& ! 
stiite .if Karnataka has EffJfi? 

&r ,n * which s -a 

An advisory committee set upbvk 

SfKiSf'ri*! 

l^plo should become RZ 

ot ** i 

But although the provincial m 
eminent accepted the mmfl 1 
torn it postponed their import* 
itm following protests from the lb 
uistic minorities. ™ 

Hindu zealots, however, «. 
sounded to the delay by rioting nd 
the government was forced to Sen 
speedy compromise which willeiuH 
students from minority groans & 
choose their mother-tongue a ife 
first language of study. 

The compromise conforms to Ox 
country’s three-language policy fe 
schools - adopted 14 years a» - 
which allows for the teaching offc 
mother- tongue, the official languor 
j of the province and a third Ibmcm, 

1 usually English, And it is antiapiid 
' that it will meet with the approvals 
the various language groups. 

One of the ironies ot the dispel* s 
that the minority language pips 
have always been in favour of iba 
children having to learn Kamodi 
compulsorily, in fact they have » 
cused the government of failing b 

S ive schools the resources to t*ri 
le language. - 


Rob Damon looks at Western education in the 

Any teacher who goes to leach in 
the Third World faces a culture 
whose underlying assumptions arc 
alien to those of the West. 

In Papua New Guinea this prob- 
lem has been prominent since (he 
dnys of early missionaries. H is dru- 
nmticuily illustrated by the stury of 
Christian missionaries whose efforts 
to spread the Word by telling the 
story of Christ's life fell foul of an 
alien value-system. The betrayal of 
Jesus was greeted by cheers of 
admiring approval for Judas, who 
was regarded as the hero of the story 
because In this culture such cunning 

considered n virtue, while The scars on these students' bncks 
Christ t sufferings at the hnnds of the arc part of the Scplk initiation rites 
soldiers during the passion were 
greeted by convulsions of derisive 
laugher - turning the other cheek 
was regarded as an extreme mid 
ludicrous loss of face. 

Westerners inherit n tradition of 
individualism which is in complete 
contrast to Papun New Guinean pat- 
terns of thought mid feeling. Western- 
ers nro surprised to discover that In 
(he system of retribution which gov- 
erned inter-tribal rivalry and conflict. 



. jscovor that In 

system of retribution which gav- 
id inter-tribal rivalry and conflict, 


Teaching in 
a cultural 
clash 

learned to perceive of u girl won Id 
bo seen us a scries of disparate, 


the cye-for-an-feyo principle applied stylized emblems - hur hair as a 
to the language group (wantoks) as n tangle of snakes, for example, 
whole, rather than to individual Clearly such radical differences in 
ottenders. There is a corresponding perception must huve significance 
emphasis within thq 'village on con- for the process of learning. And on a 
lormlty tp csublhhed custoin and a more mundane level experience of 
distrust $f nonconformity or Individual everyday life In Papua New Guinen 
Irtnovati on ..; ■ accustoms the teacher to a wuy oi 

. This is one reason why European thinking which does riot value or 
teachers find the Papua New Gui- strive for precision of the kind that is 
nean classroom very different from embodied in one of the country’s 
what they are used to: there is no common languages, pidgin, in which 
disruption or misbehaviour; but for distance is denoted in terms no more 
the same reasons there is a passivity, exact than langwe llkllk or dosftt iru 
an jmvvllli ngness, to play a creative (quite a long way and very nearby). 

Ki"/ fit! c88onpT to h 0 . But perhaps the most fundamental 

iQ BOV .Wav. - difference is that Western r^rhnnlnr ' 


Third World 

dents occurred when i visited a ri 
lage with some female students ia 
order to plum some hybrid cbcoaah 
as a sort of community service. \ 

While the girls were planiing the 
trees I shared u betol nut with ft* 
big man of (lie village. On our 
out nf the village I aroused alarm q 
spitting out the remains of Ihe uni 
into the hush. The girls, who wen* 
it happened students of exceptional 
intelligence and force of characta. 
were alarmed because leaving uj 
kind of pcisonnl rubbish behind lap 
one open to attack by sorcery. 

It is curious lo reflect that lira 
accept mice of the traditional frame 
of reference is among the ^ 
assumptions, of students who have ft 
study Western science, with w 
rulionui-scienilfic assumptions it r»j 
on. Does (Ids not, hs one rag 
expect, create u disturbing flgngj 
The answer I sense is Unit while iw 
learning of science is certainly m- 
period to some extent by tte* 
.lent*' affinity with a maglco-rellgi® 
view of cause and effect, the s& 
dents enlortnin both views 
discomfort. Like the paiient ww 
tries both the Western docUjru? 
the “glnssmaii", the student waj»; 
ledge more than one tech no 
each with its significance. 




... .m aenving 

.Western counting . systems and en-. tlfic terms. 

: 2KKS ta fi di«ewh«8. It. has. been . At the school at which I taught, a 
sUggested. for. example, that cultures student had returned to school re- 
where thc right-angle is not a feature cently in a state which his friends 

Sdi SLOT'S*.™** the assl - althariTa 5ctta of 

reflation of. Western geometry Sorcery. The usual tests, such as 


esi 


difficult. 


i :,Y n tha r cbm* Kf ponifo ki„,„ n t sticking needles into his flesh without! 

more wn^ral L eS{ ^ ase ’ Were carried out. and the 

SmaJESTa P® r ®®P* ua * vjfrerence§ headmaster Was informed. ‘Knowinu 

.®*|ferionoe .that Western medff 

wEJL-i,.®!. 0 ?! A oW: , "*5 ,v? at . Just: as cine is powerless in such a casn h* 

w J{Jj. a called in spmebue adept in the counter-i 
bio ?» dlff cra measures td sdredry, ; A concoction of 
t T0dit i °n i herbs was prepared, the victim swal- 
lowed it, was sick and, recovered. 

A second illustration of the way 

in fofma'frt# ; A nS , , w'.h ‘ “u w t J rad !‘wnal thinking is natural to even 
TOm a mfr., A pl clu re whfch we hqve. t he < most. Wcatowinfluenced stu- 

' ■ ' ' i • ' • ■ ■ ’ ; 





Iceland 

Natures Meeting. 
Place 

Experience 
Twickenham* 

Iceland-you II , i^- ■ 
dlsfOvcrdrannW* 
scenery i)p»fpas ,e “ 

In ih»wfirl«L ; J 

. ScandinayWn 

huapOnklyird . 

Buri'riblnuly 
cllnmlc lion. May 
to Sepl ember. ( 

Unspoiled. - 

iinpo1lu1«l.unWm«l *~-t- 

■ 

ni.B9B« gOtg4ho ur»|- 




T wMgrflOT Try^ -4 1 


m 


nffi TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


ifrited States/Deborah Kasouf ' * “ “ — 

Alarm over maths and science derli™ 

WASHINGTON: The continuing de- and less than n fim, i j , UCvllllE 

dine In the quality and quantity of of science. fth had three ^ almost exclusively thrown , < ^ 

science and mathematics education As for the * . lives intend £ th «>ugh tax incen- 

has resulted in a large number of science feamine . ma . ths investment butrh’ s mu,ate P r 'vate 

“scientifically and technologically steady decl^of^iflnrf^” 1 ®? ,he not suffice fl P pr0ach 

illiterate" students graduating from scored in miVhr.mL ,andard,zed l «t Senam? said - 

American high schools, according to fact that three nrenm' U Wel1 85 the tremendmll ? 0hio ’ said 

Mr Paul Hurd, professor emeritus at cducniional^1Jssm e mrtT ti0nwide and maThematics^ W?®* ? n science 
Stanford University. »70 have shoSS TSS hJ ^SSr nn ^ secondary Shook and 

“The facts are alarming and carry science achievement^ u ^ well C,lne In Ja P fln the Soviet rrS„ Q . CrmHny ’ 
the message that America seems to A numhnr „r duHro et . Union was pro- 


OVERSEAS 


I AustraUe/Bfll Purvis 

Study shows 

smokeless 

success 




sdence and enaineering or eve 
participating fully as citizens i 
modem world of sdence am 


is in the 
and en- 


modem world of sdence and en 
dneering," he said. 

Mr mird told the National Con 

.«■ pj «• . * 


in reMrd 8, ro fr °-' Sex stere o‘yping me^fwh 5 *™ D i the Federal Gover n- 

i -ft s d t0 r a 


wnuiu iu.u Miu i^ouuiim v.un- science teachers education were n 

i&m ssssi 

said. 1 


officials and businessmen, that 

elementary school pupils received on 1U1C .. . . . 

f“Y >0 t y T llour ? fs f. i f n “. ani1 Another . n..,.. Mr ... nunt, a„d ^ooltords E ° V ' rn ' «« a number of nates with 

less than four hours of arithmetic. Denison wnW ,L , Edward Initiatives inirpn i . , governors who ore readine the fii 

srs^Ji "Ssat’S-a - S'asataft’sa 

SLy studied the subject, ly^he gewrK slates^Stu 601 ' 6 " 10 ” “ e that their 

SKterfi 

have completed three year, of ,ih. alte iM the SJSSTM SS 1 rid “ h “ ^ to *3SV 

CraiD AnHprsrvri gnal<». a . “ — rr- these skills.” 


problem. They s^T^d The * -J— ” 
Federal govenunem fulfilling a oart- the curr »nilum. 

S P «, S, ar are . , 

!late! eraa°- 


a, SriSSSSl 

BRUSSELS: ^ 2„ A " ^ 

seriously behind several other CSm? British Cphnnlc m K imniStena I meeting, 

men Market countries In the amount "HUail M lllHklC I1AAH ¥71 ® 

.r ...lii. ■ 


?P N .F Ys ABdrallan teachers and 
education departments are optimistic 
* W inll-smiiklsi campaigns aimed 
at high school students. 

Cancer research bodies In various 
states are working with education de- 
partments and results show that the 
ra “Mge starting lo sink in. 

Preliminary results from a study In 
nve high schools In Victoria show an 
encouraging trend, particularly araonu 
younger pupils. 

A psychologist with the Victoria 
education department. Professor 
Robert Wake, said the basis ofthe 
«»mpalgn was to get senior students 
to influence their younger school- 
mares* 

The Victoria study Involves train- 
ing teams of four students to put peer 
pressure on other pupils to dissuade 
them From smoking. First result or 
the study in the first five months of 
this year show that this Es more effec- 
tive than previous campaigns based 
on adults lecturing school pupils. 


HIIIVUIII 

of public money it spends on educa- 
lipo, acccording to EEC figures re- 


liflflt acccording to EEC figures re- 
leased last week, 

Figures compiled by the EEC's 
statistical office show Britain to be 
well behind countries such as Ger- 


Rritich „ ana previews next week ’ s 

Hritisn schools are poor men of Eurooe projects have twinned schools with 

if population in ihl, Mtegoiy , GD p. tata-d-, .. . SS •«-"«» ■«*- 


r — “ 1'il l ■ ■■■■*— I. avilWJS Willi 

head of population in thk mtaonn. nrvn , , „ . onus and created classroom indue- 

{jojjand anS Denmark just Iess 8 thM °2hS education budget on training. tn ^' managed by the children, 

s£ e £Seii srSS 

ipulation than Britain. The United the S^ GD°p nIy 4 ‘® PW C ° m ° f ?3“ ° f th ? main Items under dis- S 


••vh wHiiiiivj auwii as VJCI- 

many, Holland, Belgium and Den- 
mark in terms of the amount spent 


... — — - , apem 

on all types of education and voca- 
tnna! (raining. 

to 1978, Ihe most recent year for 

.ILL £..11 ■# . • * . 


to have spent less per of ?ver flS.OOO^orillion at 1978 levels - - — ^ °n.y pcr cent. Commission's eTuca(ion dir«tora t e 
population than Britain 1 ! Tha United the S!y s GDP y 8 P ' r ° f * °, m of lh » main Items under dls- al S1 “ S appr0T - 

s 5 SSB 5 f SS 


fleet its relative lack of prosperity 
Education spending in the Nether- 
lands was equivalent to 7.6 per cent 

Of the country's omu ... 


snuwn up Dy the EEC statistics is the on May 24^riH ba a n7^ fi ™ Wes *iy reduce the size of the 
HJP'JSr*! * he “Wf® b . ud 8e‘ extension to an EEC !«£[% PiI2ESfi new * Programme. But the 
E ^!f r n L 0 .. : ™ c ! t,onal fPW- signed to help children * ch . enie wil1 be 


1 . i — wuuwauuu UUUEcE 

‘given over to vocational training. 
Even here Britain comes well down 
m the ratings. In 1978 Britain spent 
nniv a i .r i,. _ . r. 


aged between 5 and 24. In the same 
y«r Belgium spent over £1,000 per 


— -- — -i. -uv piugicuume ue- 

signed to help children bridge die 
gap between school and work. 

For the past three and a half years 


I '“VUVUIIUII umuuilicu 10 /,£ 

per cent of GDP. Britain’s education 
budget represented 5.7 per cent of its 


one-aiiarfpr nf fhoir “2 re schoolchildren adapt to the 

one quarter of their entire world outside the classroom. The 


• - ' -- -vhviiiv mil UG 

S5K# by, Commission officials, 
wew of the spiralling 
levels of youth employment. 

Ministers will also discuss mutual 
recognition or educational diplomas 
and a paper on new technology and 
“V? *ype of social and educational 
.adjustments which will be neeA-ri 







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Letters 


HIK TIMES KIHU ATIONAL SUPPLEMBn 


i- : ! • 


» *! ■ ‘I 


> i r 

Ik: ; 


M -i • ; 


Sir - As t am enjoying teaching 7o* 
Kilt a Mockingbird and look for- 
ward to marking hundreds of scripts 
on it for the Oxford Delegncy in a 
few weeks' time, I am sorry that Dr 
Hughes should take such exception 
to ft (ray. April 30). 

I do not necessarily agree with all 
the detailed points he raises on the 
book's allegedly patronizing atti- 
tudes. But what I find more disturb- 
ing is the thesis that a novel should 
not be taught if the teacher docs not 
like the outlook he finds in 
it, even if its major weakness is 
merely that it “was first published in 
1960 and it is suffused with that 
belief in the value of naive goodwill 
which was so fashionable at the 
time"'.' 

Should I not have taught Oliver 
Twist last year because Dickens deals 
harshly with The Jew and idealizes 
Olivers character and speech? It is 
only if our classes like a book and 
are involved with it that we have a 
chance of discussing such issues as 
those which Dr Hughes raises. 

R D BEALE 

183 Leckhampton Road 

Cheltenham 

Glos 

Sir - 1 wish to comment on the 
article about To Kilt a Mocking bird 
As an O level pupil I disagree with Dr . 
Hughes. His first point was that this 
could not possibly be written from a 
child's point of view because it was 
“narrated in a distinctively adult 
voice". 

Does he not see that the book was 
written by n woman remembering 
her youth? She writes about what she 

Preschool fees 

Sir - Barbara Kelly’s letter (TES 
May 7) raises some interesting ques- 
tions. In relation lo charges being 
made for pro-statutory school provi- 
sion, parents (and others) are 
already paying for such services 
through : rates and taxes levied 
through local and central govern- 
ment. 

The fact of particular decisions 
being made as to where priority for 
spending that money should be put is 
a further problem. 


The meaning of ‘Mockingbird’ 


felt, saw nnd understood. 

1 ngree that the book could be 
valuable lo promote non-racialism, 
but not with his comment that “a 
closer examination of the novel re- 
veals that it is extraordinarily con- 
fused on the subject of the racial 
issue". 

Dr Hughes should remember that 
when the book was written blacks 
were roundly discriminated against 
and did riot become doctors. As for 
teaching, it is very unlikely that they 
even went to school. If Harper Lee 
had written them in os doctors, 
teachers and so on, she would 
obviously be accused of not telling 
the truth. 

Lastly, I should like to point out 
that IS and 16-year-olds do enjoy 
this book. This is not because it is 
easier than Jane Austen, George 
Eliot and Charlotte Bronte. If any- 
thing a book like Pride and Prejudice 
is cosier than To Kill a Mocking- 
bird . 6 

Harper Lee has written a book 
that is a lot more than a “folksy tale” 
of 1930s Alabama. It is a social com- 
mentary on the Deep South and, 
considering it was written in 1960, a 
brave attempt to make people take 
notice of social injustice. 

JULIA CLARK 
165 Addison Road 
Rudby 

Sir - I was very surprised to read Dr 
Hughes's unfavourable review of To 

Duke and science 

Sir - I am sure the quotes from the 
Duke of Edinburgh's forthcoming 
book have been neatly juxtaposed by 
Aristides. Let us nope that His 
Royal Highness will note their rele- 
vance, and try to base future critic- 
isms on experience. He might then 
be aware that planners of schools' 
science curricula feel It is also "worth 
bothering about" the bodily functions 


No suggestion is being made, 
therefore, that changes should be 
made for such provision, since any 


of respiration, circulation, digestion, 
and the nervous system. The. truly 
sad commentary is that society finds 


Kill a Mockingbird. His dismissal of 
both the structure and content of the 
novel, which justly won the Pulitzer 
Prize after it was published in I960, 
and his implied comparison of the 
novel to comics seems very unreason- 
able. 

i have studied the novel with O 
level and CSE classes and I am still 
pleasantly surprised ut how very 
good it is. The enthusiasm of the 
classes is reflected in the depth of 
their appreciation and understanding. 

DAVID EASTON 
Head of English 
The High School 
Welshpool 
Powys 

Sir - I was angry and shocked after 
reading Dr Hughes’s article. I am 
studying the book for O level and I 
think it is highly-intelligcnt and read- 
able literature, worthy of the awards 
ft has won. 

Is Dr Hughes seriously suggesting 
that this book is set by GCE boards 
to promote non-racialist attitudes? I 
find it hard to believe. 

The social question of racialism 
might be confused in the novel but 
since it was a confused subject, in 
the 1930s, it is hardly suprising. 

I completely disagree with Dr 
Hughes’ analysis of the ending of the 
book. He seems to have missed the 
point of the full meaning of the 
'mockingbird" symbolism. Boo Rad- 
fay is n shy, lonely man who has 

regular inspection by independent 
assessors, but there are less than 30 
of us. It is in the interests of all 
concerned that a British Independent 
Education Council should come into 
existence in the near future and be- 
gin Its work of inspection and accre- 
ditation as soon ns possible. 

J L NORDEN 
Principal 
Davies’s College 
66 Southampton Row 


reproduction the only bodily function 
Interesting enough to be “expert" 
about. 

How sad also that Prince Philip 


such requirement immediately places How sad also that Princo Philip 
restrictions .on- freadom of choice, feels it necessary to Join (or lea cm 
insofar as ability ■ and/or .willingness that large section of ' society which 
to pay would enter Into any decisions cniovs a war-round onensaaKon on 


Insofar as ability ■ and/or willingness 
to pay would enter Into any decisions 
made. 

It Is Imperative that evety. effort Is 
made to ensure that flexible, high- 
quality pie-statutory provislou should 
be made, and that this provision 
should draw on 1 the considerable 
variety of interests and expertise 
.which exists in the field of education 
and care of very young children. 

CYNTHIA JAMES 

The British' Association for Early 

Chiidfadod Education 

London SlEl-1.: 




Reciprocal study ; 
visit to; Israel ; 

• AppiWtooa— «re : i invited from j 
v teachers Interested in ..besting an 
letted teacher In July 198 jT and * 
making a return three week visit to 
Iambi . In December 1982/January 

ig03. ■ . 

T- Fud Travel grant: artf/ reciprocal k 
hospitality ■ available to auooesaiul * 
applicarjts; • ; : ’• 

Further details and: application \ 
fotme ; from Study visit sarvtase. : 
Central; idfaau: for Educational 


enjoys a year-round open season on 
education. One must wonder when 
he last for first) visited a slate secon- 
dary ’ school and studied its curri- 
culum. 

C g JORDAN 

Deputy Head of Upper School 
Grange- School . : 

Oldham • ! . ■ / J 

Keeping promises 

Sir - Valerie Aggett (May 7) is 
wrong - much, more than the 
“grapevine” Is needed to protect 
overseas studetttf from unscrupulous 
operators In^ privat further educa- 
tion wUbii.shmenta. By the time that 
the Student realises ‘that he- or she 

Vary recently, . -a . '^Gbllege" 
accepted a; student (known* to me) 
for k, one-year A levels course Who 
bad Completely failed all bfe-0 level 
equivalents to . bis own country. 
.Atlothgf, - student,; who had set. her 
heart, on a pfacq at a British' univetth 
Pf waa 1 enCourajije^ td choose .Objects 
for h‘er>A levels, that tote cehaiO to 
'mean the bu tomtit, rejection of her 
UCCA. Application. ^wien.Ji was in 
Malaysia recently, I. was ashamfcd but 
not surprised ; to see advertisements 
placed by British establishments in 
The New Sfrafo Tffner whiih Were W 


Career support 

Sir - I was Interested to read the 
articles by Mark Jackson In the 
“School to Work" section April 30. 
The Item referring to the report to 
be published by the Rubber and 
Plastics Processing Training Board 
about the New Training Initiative 
was encouraging, but I was anxlouB 
about the article entitled “Careers 
staff activists anger their chiefs”. 

I would like to take this opportune 
Ity to express the views of the North 
West Branch of the Institute of 
Careers Officers, so that in no way 
would we be. associated with the lat- 
ter. The branch’s view is that we 
would support many of (he initiatives 
made in the White Paper “A New’ 
Training Initiative". 

, It la good to, see support for “bet- 
. ter preparation far working . life in 
schools. apd bettqr, opportunities for 
'continuing education arid personal 
development: in the early years : at 
waricV :Equally'r .we .'^support an 
r apbro^ whlcn' willy develop the 
tramirig element of.YQPto produce 
th#i. Youth Training. Scheme and we 
-arej, encouajjed by. the progressive 


done nothing wrong Inn has saved 
tiic lives of two young children from 
the evil wishes of a bitter mun. 

Boo is u mockingbird figure be- 
cause, as the sheriff of Mnycomb 
puls it. “draggin" him into (he limelight 
with his shy ways is n sin. 

The ending is, in my view, (lie 
best part of the novel and to say 
“equality is shown not to be desir- 
able when it is against the interests 
of the white community" is senseless. 

Mockingbirds only sing and do 
not harm anybody or anything and to 
kill one is thought to be a sin. Can 
not Dr Hughes appreciate n simple 
but highly intelligent comparison? 

The novel is certainly not “ill- 
written”. It has a pleasing symmetry 
and is very well constructed. 1 enjoy it 
more each time I read it. 

JONATHAN MARSH 
Burnside 

Buckingham Road 

Brackloy 

Northants 

Sir - Before i taught To Kill A 
Mockingbird for O Level this year I 
had some of the misgivings expressed 
by Dr Hughes; but now I think it is 
an excellent O level text. 

At my school there arc about 100 
candidates for O level literature of 
whom about 20 will take English A 
level and possibly three study the 
subject nt university. Dr Hughes pre- 
sumably sees only those three. 

My own dass ranged from those 
capable of obtaining a first class hon- 

through and out of the scheme is to 
be a reality for trainees. The careers 
service is best qualified lo provide 
this counselling, and we sec it as our 
role to provide such counselling. It is 
essential that the service plays on 
integral part In the establishment and 
functioning of the New Training In- 
itiative. 

We possess a long-established ex- 
pertise In the fields of vocational 
guidance and counselling of indi- 
vidual young people, In identification 
of suitablo employ men I and training 
opportunities nnd the advising on de- 
velopment of appropriate curcers 
education programmes in schools nnd 
colleges. 

A major strength is that the ser- 
vice is locally organized and nil 
aspects of its work reflect local con- 
ditions, local opportunities and local 
developments. It has over the past 
few years, with tiie establishment of 
YOF, acquired a close working rela- 
tionship on a local basis wiln em- 
ployers, scheme sponsors, the further 
education sector, SPD/TSD and ESD 
as well as other educational and non- 
educational agencies Interested in the 
transition of young people from full- 
time education to working life and 
has developed expertise in planning, 
marketing and assessing schemes 
within YOP. 

We must, however, register strong 
criticism with respect to Uie proposed 


ours degree in Enalish * n 
mentioned by Dr Hughes w Al 
[Hiver read a serious &ok Jfo Z 
I cy all a Brec on one thing 
hteruturc course: that they 

n ® cd siudyin8 t ° di 

YVONNE BRADBURY 
The Limes 
On re 

Marlborough 

Wiltshire 

Sir, - Dr Hughes suggests a level of 
insensitivity, which, in other arenas of 
debate, has threatened the use of i 
books such as Kes or Joby. 

The first and most important fact 
only vaguely hinted at in the artjtjt 
is that teachers do not /laWfo 
choose it as a set text. That they* 
implies that there ore qualities in tbe 
■novel worth reinforcing. 

The main focus of the novel is/wt,* 
suggested by Dr Hughes, the trial of 
Tom Robinson, as this occurs hajfws 
through the novel. The trial Is part of 
the larger issue of adult toleraxc, 
irrespective of racial overtones. Scon 
learns the truth of the maxim offend 
to her by her father: “You never 1*4 
understand a person until you ooofida 
things from this point of view - onfl 
you climb info his skin and walk aioud 
in it." 

Until this message beoor 
irrelevant lo modern society, I ski 
continue to enjoy this novel with ay 
students. 

F G GREAVES 
Chairman 

Surrey Branch of the National Asso- 
ciation for the Teaching of English 
7 Woodlands Avenue 
Redhlll 

Surrey ■ 

Equally we fed that the alio- 
wnnccs suggested for trainees on the 
Youth Training Scheme, namrif 
around £750 per annum for minimus 
age school leavers and around £1.258 
p.a. for the older group, are m- 
realistic. This level of payment wl 
crente greater hardship tor tow-- 
viduals und families. It would be 
unfortunate if young people were 
alienated against participation in w 
Youth Training Schcm? betsuwjw 
Government Is unable to atm 
upon a realistic training nilowaooj. 

Finally, wc would ask about IK 
future for tlio IB-ycar-olds who b*w 
left full-time education and are* 
employed. No guarantees of pw» 
on flic Youth Training Scheme ate 

made for (his group. Uke PonilJ' 
Pilnto, nre wo to wash our nanfi« 
responsibility towards these ym 
people? 

l. 

J BYRNE , rfhnl . 

North West Branch of the lulling 
of Careers Officers 
High Ugh 

Nr Knutsford . ...... 


Universal goals 

Sir - In your_ 
reported 


changes Ip the supplementary benefit 
regulations/ The proposed regula- 
tions are divisive ana will farther 
•'disadvantage: those families who 


^ OBJ 0 

offer a 


fljnnio 


attitude being taken .to the training 
for, craft, technician ■ and progressive 
skills, The^ are aU initianvM which 
'this , branch has beep advocating for 


already suftef the greatest financial 
hardships. It is well known amongst 
people who have genuine contact 
with the unemployed that some 
academically able young people are 
forced to leave ■ full-time education 




Howevpr, to make the New Tfain- 
, fog Initiative a .bqtter and more fate, 

S ated. ptoVislon for ydupg people 
e Government must look to strong- 
thening and ; developing ' two areas 
j .Whlcli were .Pot given adequate eon- 


forced to leave . full-time education 
without reaching their potential. In- 
variably the reason is that the fami- 
lies peed money - even sup- 
plcmeptary 'benefit - to exist. ; r 
! in times of, better eniploymenl 


with other people; of 


people are 3. neip siuu™»,*£- ;,r 
‘ education job they could d£^ we « 
lenUal In-. ’ Shou/d tmn* 


. thcfnitig and ■. developing - two areas 
jjjVhich were .Pdt given adequate con- 
sideratipn during the >ign of the 


prospects many would find work. For 
some there wnl be an adequate allo- 
wance if they enter the Youth Train- 
ing Scheme but will there be auffi- ' 
dent' suitable places on the scheme 
far all the unemployed young peo- 
ple? If not, do wo not have a flnan- 


po means free- ot^diqfortiohs/ arid VYSSrOonffitU?. ■ 5% t th ! y«fog fl P«o- 

SeVeri' ddcebtioris.V* - - jy 0 ? 9 ? 1 ?* “ ® not » do wo not have a flnan- 

Those of Us Who' bdioriB to the fadividual trainees cial responsibility to the remaining 

1 CoXS^ f^ fadepc® quality of unemployed? Thov should rctaiS 

•••vv/'i ‘:r ■ 


Iflng will tie 


foeir entitlement 
beriefit. 


Should triP« fcr m 

of all 1 

fourth and fifth fomters/ . . 

FRED JANES 
Principal 

Yeovlj College 

Somerset 

j K • 

Utters for 

short as. possible wd snot^- ^ 
ten on one ^ e f^ e rl ffio^° r . 

Ihe editor reserves dfW 1 ..... 

ameitd them if necessary. 




THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


a creative response to conflict 

Roys on's claim that peace studies is a war nnd ueace nrJ S uestl on of ery which exists tn a- ■ 

wiwpring influence on school chil- j„ new I J^ nt ! Jf“f toda y a just and reaSfS tk" F onc l l . usion - by means oF their own film whirh c}l H a 

dren which encourages appeasement princinles hawi. ll« B ". ol 1 tflat the does not meanS .i,™ e r- This intelligence, that eovemments u/hirh filni w foch showed Argenti 
cmrender to totalitarian forces. wnr ho. «i changed but todav (nmuraiMj i. they are being suoDort flnnrpuinn nr in... t which vors of the General BeJei 


vetoping an awareness oi me imer- ror and its wicked us nor ' 
dependence of the peoples of the i n niy vi 
S and a critical attitude to poll- enub | c y p eo , a “ sl, {K should 
ileal Issues so that young people can wavs of seeK non-violent 

become well informed mid able to “If??, fo. ‘heir 


i not n meaTfam , th manner ' Sigwre, ^LriovemLms which ^ W 5 iC £ 5> JH wed Ar gentinian survi- 

" whethtr they be of 8 “lefF or “rij,h?‘ hSh,™ rj^SS. 0 ” >™T[ es " « 


-- — a--, niuruiiy COmiD 

whether they be of a “left* or "riaht 
persuasion. 6 


understanding of forces which affect without fostering a SIS 1 ® 
human nature and lend to conflict or esteem resonnSftnL“ f 
peace. Many people have recently x \iT Then and 

Ke aware Hint there is a need to within the fiefd 0 f MLi ap 5 r0ac ^ es 
Gad more creative wnys of respond- which „ h«ii^^._ educa,l 9 n 


i^rfdStroying the world sivera, 

X* studies seeks to explore new There SjjfSSj gSfBjf 0111 
wavs of approaching old prohlcms. v n „n. .l.,. . el P luL 


The fear that lurks behind the mask 


Sir -Rhodes Boyson’s statement that 
peace studies mask “an emphasis on 
appeasement and surrender to any 
Idtahlarian forces threatening our 
society" (TES May 7) itself less than 
masks the fear of the authoritarian in 
the face of the kind of redistribution 
of power in society which such multi- 
disciplinary courses could evoke by 

S up controversial issues to 
m. 

Had he taken the trouble to ex- 
unine a peace studies curriculum 
proposal he should have discovered 
that it aimed to present problems of 


Tragic loss 


Sir - In a recent issue Brian Bowles 
wole on behalf of his group of 
teachers to express their disquiet and 
diwnay at what has been uml is being 
done lo the Schools Council project, 
K? by the examination 
PWTos. There have been few de- 
velopments In education in recent 
y«R to which one could give 
wholehearted support, but the pro- 
was certainly one of those tew. 
advances Ft made in history 

te&hina Ulna Mn_.. .1 *r . - 


was certainly one of those tew. 
advances Ft made in history 
bribing Were many and significant. 

Sri 1 ff ve r ho P c for tiio future, 
wly all of whnt was ucliicved is 
g? u, wafaned ns a result of ill- 
gmed partisan nnd almost mnli- 

^ UH a ? ks f on . the P«»jcci which 
jjj® bi to its thorough cmnsculn- 

j ohn pines 

IlW,Uu,u of ,n * hur 

B^Jor Regis 

Poet’s inspiration 

■ i ? ei » , ocl to read the 
Adrian uiilL n nthon y Adams (hot 

MBir a be,,cr p 061 

Adrian HR Privileged to have 
(tsid M|tchell with us; as poet in 

■S’ ini lW0 . y eara - H» lively 

.Ekfto^n ? rin $. att,tude s° ve 
■^ wJ n B || K 001 i nt L in f thfi 

f ^ enefited from 
°f poetry and his 
with us. 

^^B’Kk 2 nel,m L es d,ff cfad to 

Vn . Br jd ■ we all benefited 

Nj'-th*. h?r 0nS L 1 am Pfaased to 
fetter poet than 


S^iwfo- B hl i a bettcr P° et than 
^fofoly o sound 

te. . 


violence and conflict from a neutral 
stance. This provides students with a 
basis for responsible decision- 
making. 

It is poor testimony to British 
teacher education to view its pro- 
ducts with the suspicion advisable in 
countries where teachers are not 
home-grown but trained under 
varied, often conflicting, ideologies. 

ANNE RICKWOOD 
Curriculum Studies Dept 
London University 
institute of Education 

terms of advertising, hours taken fill- 
ing in forms, hours taken in- reading 
forms, sending out further particu- 
lars, taking up references and inter- 
viewing, is well over £1,000. I have 
read every application but I cannot 
guarantee that with such a large 
number of applicants, the result will 
necessarily be the best appointment 
wc could possibly make. 

It seems to me that the over-pro- 
duction of teachers with high qual- 
ifications in history is a sconuai caus- 
ing over-work and stress for far too 
many people. 

JOHN D ANDERSON 
Head 

Beck foot Grammar School 

Wagon Lane 

Uinglcy 


Owning up 


Sir. - Alas, John Tomlinson is quite 
correct in his letter in your last issue. 
1 miwioii out part of the quotation 
from his presidential address, be- 
cause i mude (hc mistake of relying 


on a report In on educational Journal 
(not, I am glad lo say., The TES ) and 
not the original text. 

1 am saddened to see that it was 
John Tomlinson's advocacy of a spe- 
cific grant that led him to support 
the proposal for an educational block 
grant. The arguments in my article, 
however, remain to be answered. An 
educational block today would be 
very different from specific grants 
previously discussed. I hope that all 
those in education will consider- the 


jftb to choose 

fl?*^ASrv 22i n H^ Advertised a 
JSi ^fatted in ft is 
•S whij; j 2ft val history at A 
S?^ 1 the ^ S h U d , not fofah en- 
JSMVb fifif to be larger than 
^^cJRibSl 153 applicu* 
I thl * exercise in 

( ... , 


(ion budget. The consequences could 
be very serious for education. 

JOHN D STEWART 
Director 

Institute of Local Government Stu- 
dies . . 

University of Birmingham 

Black mark 

Sir - In your May 7 article on Jess 
you showed a picture of a chess 
board drawn on r black-board which 
had a black square in the bottom 
right-hand corner. This is wrong be- 
cause there should be a white square. 

MARCUS MASTERSON (AGE Jl) 

Lympstone Primary School Uiess 

Team 

lympstone 

Exmouth 


, ", . . VIICIIIIG3 as 

brothers and sisters, and at the same 
One of the most basic orincinle* nf , cncoura 8 e .them to become 

peace education is the aroeptance of “ l ? ce ro e d about the oppres- 

all the peoples of the wofld « ^ is not an 


all the peoples of the worid « mom S “ . “ n J ust, y ed. It is not an 
bers of thS human family ft SSEb^Si an ? it is certainly one 
view which transcends a narrow relf r"? erS those en 8 a S ed fo edu- 

ish concern about one’s own countrv u lin * for . r p ? HC , e vcr ? vulnerable, 
while Ignoring (he ffiSTlJLL!.. 1 ^ ib '= <« >-=ch 


H., C,0seI L P **» human rights dSatora “ aS by tyI * m * CATHERI] 


righS ^ M by an3 CATHERINE KELLY 

at ev- Even today as I write this letter I Pm alSSi °° ° f PeaCC Edumitm 

to the plained BBC^fte^reeiSg"^' iSfpegff 111 Catholic Movement 


Courses 




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SSSE5 




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Courses and Study Packs 
to further your career development 


Over the. past decade, (he Open University has biilit up a 
wide range 61 courses specifically, designed for practising 
teachers. The development Ihls year of new study packs 
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stage further' 

All of these coupes end packs have been produced to help 
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Some of the courses are particularly focused on Uie class- 
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For a free guide to the Associate Student Programme with 
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Musical 

scales 

Robert Wysoine 

A glance through the appointments 
vacant columns in The TES makes 
me scream in despair at many head 
teachers' reluctance to offer proper 
financial reward to heads of music 
departments. Typicnl of this arro- 
gance is: 

“Enthusiastic haul of music depart- 
ment reifuiml, to build up the subject 
through the school and run two 
choirs, three orchestras, brass hand, 
wind group, recorder group, jazz 
group, organize the peripatetic 
teaching. Rugby an advantage; Scale 
2 for suitable applicant. ” 

What this really means is: 

" . . . . required to teach the subject 
to everyone in the first three years, 
mostly in the corridor, withprobably 
only small part-time help, fight with 
the PE department over which even- 
ings and lunchtimes kids arc avail- 
able For the two choirs, three orches- 
tras, etc, spend hours on the tele- 
phone with peripatetic staff who can 


only make Thursday 3pm till 4pm" 
when the ‘'respectable” subject staff 
won't let the Kids out from lessons 


anyway, work your guts out until 
7pm each night without the head 
knowing because he went at Spm (if 
he's not on a course), fight to main- 
tain A level teaching with perhaps 
small groups (because it was set 
against French, German, physics and 
biology in the fourth year - and 
everyone must choose a language 


Having spent nearly two ycurs run- 
ning short courses in counselling 
skills at a tcnchcrs’ centre, I worked 
in a special school, and having just 
completed a part-time M A as well 
as being the mother of a nine-year- 
old, I have been involved in several 
different kinds of relationship with 
the teaching profession. 

It seems to me that in too many 
institutions offering “training” to 
teachers tliorc has been ail over- 
emphasis on theory. In (he world of 
sport or music skills can never be 
solely acquired by being told about 
them or reading about them. The 

E ercon interested in taking up a spnrl 
as to practise certain techniques be- 
fore becoming capuhlc of playing 
well. Likewise practising an instru- 
ment is ossenlial to the competent 
performance of music. 

There is n great dual of expertise 
available now on training in personal 
relationships that can help teachers 
in their work. Improvement in such 
skills as listening, questioning, re- 
sponding appropriately and problem- 
solving, among many others are even 
more essential for those in schools 
who are given responsibility for pas- 
toral care, often without training, 
guidance or support In this very de- 
manding role. . 

■ The ability to listen actively with 
the intention of trying to understand 
another person's outlook on life; us- 


We are assured by experts that com- 
puters ,can be used for supporting 
activities in a wide range of subjects 
from 1 . Science I to modem languages, 
So cah';a modern lahguages’ teacher 
look upbn the dpWn qf a new era for 
his! teaching? Something even more 
povVerful than talk atid chalk? Yea, 
even greater than flashcards and col- 
OurecT filmstrips? 

l; acquired a rudimentary know- 
ledge : of BASIC ■ after a six hour 

S ammlng course. Dreams of re-. 

ig. drudgery from . endless verb 
tables, enhanced! by the thrill of tech- 
nology, impelled me fa construct a 
programme whereby those immortal 
lines ^011 . in the missing parts of the 
Vefb: Eire -je" would be but the 
huntble beginnings of scientifically- 
constructed | . pupil-orientated lan- 
guage learning.; Oncd set up, strings of 
vefba. 'dormant in grammar books, 


yuiuwm mi giammur uuokk, 

Wpidd .8 pribg to life. 

Automatic ' Men's" would 
glow from the screen h rewarding cor- 


DOIO'T Ten. AA£. 
. StfLE Z ? * 



and a science), make damned sure 
there are three good concerts a year 
and perhaps a musical every other 
year so that we can put it in (lie 
prospectus and invite (he gov- 
ernors ..." 

It is a great shame that so many 
heads still think that u successful 
music department is one which pro- 


Car ng 
ski s 

Caroline loll 


ing questions in a way that helps 
another to talk; responding approp- 
riately so die other feels supported 
and encouraged; helping die other 
person to find Ids or her solution 
after exploring die possibilities « 
these arc all skills which can he 
developed in most people. There are 
ways of helping llial, in the long 
term, are more effective than just 

f living advice though that ean have 
In place too. 

Some people nppcnr to he "horn 
teachers" hut ovon they can benefit 
from ii greutur awareness of what 
makes them effective. Ilierc is no 
doubt in my mind from the work I 
have dono that those who are loss 
able, or maybe just less confident, in 
the area of personal skills cun benefit 
enormously from n constructive, 
practical training course. 

The effects of this type of training 
on teachers seems to benefit the chil- 
dren in their care, the parents of 
those children, and colleagues both in 
and out of school. But perhaps most 
important is the teacher's growing 
competence and confidence in mak- 


Parlez-vous 




Ray Symons 


dmv*. public performances - wfm 
pocs on in the classroom is Tar more 

;;;'nc\ r i iiml " ,is is rarei * s 

Why can't hends of music be em- 
ployed on Scale 4 salaries? Certamfr 
there arc a small number, and om 

‘if " nly ^ > the enlighi. 
iiud few. Why should we work dL 
hours than most other heads of jfc. 
partniems. with no lunch breaks and 
early evening family life, without 
being given a just return? 

Sonic heads think that they m 
giving the earth by allowing 0.6 of an 
assistant in the department; a bead 
of maths or English with four or fire 
assistants has it much easier - “cap. 
able of organizing a large maths/ 
English department", read the job 
specifications. This often means m 
the lower school and CSE groups at 
doled nut to the Scale Is, and the 
head of department keeps the sUib 
form, top 0 level group and one firn 
year elass to appease the workers. 

I once turned down a post offend 
to inc because the heaa refused to 
give me a Scale 4. “You'd be on the 
same scale as my head of maths - 
that would never do", said he. “Ill 
probably work a damned sight hn- 
dcr than your head of maths' , said!. 
“Good afternoon”, said he. 

At a time when schools are being 
taken over (or in?) by the compute 
age, surely headteachers must reafia 
the value of those subjects whkh 
offer human contact, creativity ipd 


financially penalized because of the 
subject you teach is nothing short of 
iniquitous. 


Robert Wvsoine is director of waw 
at New (.allege, Telford. 


ing constructive relationships with >H 
these people and the resulting m- 
crcusc In personal job satisfaction. 
Anything that can help to increase 
this would seem to he welcome m 
when so many differing sections ot 
society lire making sometimes w- 
reasonable and even impoaible «■ 
mn nds on the teaching professloa. 

In my view, jwuple are ihost re- 
ceptive to, and best able to iw. 
skills training after h ™Z 
some cx|jcrienee and the 
(ruining should be turned onto 
i head. Aspiring teachers could 
1 under close supervision in Ktw 
first, then he seconded to a cojM 
which has a carefully grajj ■ “5 
grated approach to skills ,rai " in *. u 
intellectual theory, f cannot g 
feeling that this would bo nioreg 
fid t linn the present system 
the teaching practice part 
is a very vuriahle 
unproductive ordeal to n prefab” 
enriching development. 


ii 


ut^rMpohsdSi' whild npansfatil refer-; 
1 ff nee- to: Unfa 17 ■ packed * with ' d’oirect 

• . ■* .„"tr , .• . 


models would tirelessly chide (and in- 
form) the less able. The teacher, 
meanwhile, freed from such menial 
task$, would, as the true profession- 
al, attend to the various needs of the 
other 31 pupils in the classroom) 

How at first my heart warmed to 
the computcrl Its impef^ohul legibil- 
ity, Its keyboard. ideally nulled to the 
learning: of 1 typewriting, its magic 
backspace With -instant Tippcx 
TadiiiYr 

You may .imagine how deflated 
I became - after 30 minutes typing - 
to read "syntax error line III." Retyp- 
ing,' rethinking, reform! to notes en- 
sued' then "syntax error. 'line 40" 
appeared, on the screen r- this tinlc 


no 

^ nvw |. • — /■ 

rewarded by tw 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21,5.82 


A lan Weeks looks at the information pro- 
vided for parents by half the compreC 
Lsives ra London and finds the cnrritSm 

,n most of them little different to his o™ 
schooling oyer 30 years ago. Few moves hj£ 
been made towards mtegrating subjects or mo- 
„dmg boys and girls with equal opportunities; 
muted ability teaching ts far from King domb 
nant and few of the capital’s schools reflect 
then posit, on m one of the most multicultural 
cities in the world. 


m ToZrf^ 1 100 schools and 

a 5 rf “e ?°L 0bli * ed 10 ““dy any 

“S' RF 1 , E " g t Sh ' ™ ,hs and PE - 1" 128 

, B y gh< as RE - in 31 BS some 
form of social education and in 14 as some 
form of general life studies. 

sri " l : e ld ? * h ° o| s not enforcing the study of 
snence right through, 76 of them have a 

S h°eL C dTfl 0f ° nl ^ English and maths - 
suWectsm ml flVe V X 00,11 P letel y optional 
_£J^ctM^nake up their programme. 


Only 3 schools 
out ot 107 mixed schools <3%) 
refer to equal opportunities 
for boys and girts 
fn their statements of aims 


The . 

conservatne 

curriculum 



B rochures of information for parents have 
their weaknesses as sources of analyses 
of school life. Ail written accounts of 
institutions are a poor substitute for 
actually living in them and many schools are 
inexpenenced in providing information. Nevcr- 
loelcss, they arc a source of knowledge about 
schools. 

The 173 I looked nt represent about half the 
^omprehensives (excluding sixth form colleges) 
m London; just over half the schools in the 
outer London boroughs and just under half 
loose in inner London. They wore intended to 
rowr the sort of information required by the 
liw Education Act though many schools were 
proving this information, and much more 
, Si ° e / ore they were legally obliged to. 

‘ f ob v |Qu s from the brochures that many 
l 7, , Jeorizing about integrating traditional 
Amf 5 S l^ s ^ ^ lt * e effect on these schools. 
rtJL SUC ” 1 . n . lc B rR, i l,n ta kes place exclusively in 
m . humanities «nd creative arts, mid then only 
he lower school. Iliu exceptions wore five 
,n “■ SQ n\ple where social education is 
” 10 lower hand senior pupils. 


Only 10 schools 
«aof 107 mixed schools (17%) 
offer the lull range 
of practical crafts to 
boys and girls 


iiteiratprf 'I numanill °s aw taught in an 
package m all or part of Che lower 

od a, l l0untecl 10 integrated history 

^ ” 10 cnses ' P ,us one or more 

r . e )!n l0us ^“cction, moral educa- 
studies, sociology or biology in 22 


Only 48 common core examination program- 
I 3“ ia ? s i on at t one or the humanities. In 

nine of these social or community studies are 
I ■ specified (in one further case social studies and 

I II i another humanities subject are specified). 

A , A mod ern language is compulsory in only 17 

_ ■ W schemes, RE in eight. Creative, practical or 

I ll7/\ Jhi 8 , 0 l ub ^ c,s a l* in 31 cores a «d in five 

m/ I I m/R| sch °ols pupils choose between a subject 

W mm II f mr~ ! n curriculum area and one humanity (not 

▼ t%Wl T \y ,nclu . ded ,n *he 48 cases referred to in the 

M Paragraph). Music is specified in two 

*■ 111 /a£SL °c e ^u 01 hfls 8 rare of ei S ht subjects 

V l I I I I ■■■ (double English, maths, a science, history, 

;|l ■■■■■■ geography, art and French). Three schools 

S W--W. 1 | have a core of seven subjects. These four 

schools are the only ones with programmes 
resembling the one I followed between 1948 

offered in some, but not all of the vears- for SlhnlS.Jl ^ time i he General 

■example another foreign language, classical fion. Ceit,ficate was the 16 -P ,US examina- 

studies or snrinl ctuHipc flntu ; n n .a u ^ . . 


e — 0“| wttMivai I1UII. 

IWh !i U ? ieS, |, 0nly . I in . 11 schools u In 28 spools, however, there is a six-subiect 

French not offered to all pupils in Years 1 to core, in every case but one consistiug of dou- 

J • hip Cnnllck innil.- _ 


schools have a three-subject core (English (2) 
and maths). Schools are expecting many of 
tneir fifth formers to be taking from 7 to 10 
subjects in public examinations. 

Very few schools have streaming in their 
lower years but 54 have a clear policy in their 
senior years of dividing pupils into GCE and 
CSE classes. However, all the other schools in 
the sample allow selling within subjects, pro- 
viding potentially fluid exchanges between 
groups. Jute decisions on what examination is 
offered (GCE or CSE) and double entries in 
GCE and CSE. In 23 of these schools there is 
a cocktail of setting in some subjects and 
mixed-ab; ity grouping in others, with more 
mixed-atohty than setting in a handful of cases. 

The basic grouping policy in Years I to 3 is 
also a mixture of selling and mixed-ability 
grouping. This is so in about a third of the first 
years (only 14] of the sample have first years) 
in a half of the second years (166 schools) and 
just under half of the third years (169 schools), 
ine other most common practice is mixed- 
ability grouping across the whole year; ift first 
years in 55 schools (39 per cent) of them, in 
serond years 21 schools (12.5 per cent) and in 
third years 12 schools, (or 7 per cent). 

Banding is less common than mixedlability 
In first years (it occurs in 25 schools) but 
overtakes mixed-ability In second (29 schools) 
and third years (29 schools). 

London schools seem to take their responsi- 
bilities in careers education very seriously. All 
e ly for this in one wav 


Only 23 schools / — 

out of 173(13%) rfWhl 

mention multi-cufturan I rm|b » M 

education 



-n. - • . ,, kle English, maths, science, a creative or de- 

The core curriculum on offer for Years 1 to sign subject and a humanity; 24 schools have a 
5, tends to confirm the findings of the HMI five-subject core; 41 a fouMubject core (22 of 
Secondary Survey (Aspects of Secondary them in English, maths and sc ience), and ‘76 

The common core curriculum ot London schools 


* 




100 out of 1 73 have no compt^soiy sekmee (58%) IgSMoMTah^nocompulaofyhijm^iiassul^ii 

(history, geography, social atucBas, ale.) (72%) 


M 


Sr formed “ re tau ? h! 85 a package in 
Nh nro-Jr V schoo ' s » 14 schools have a 
W year « ^ Z8t ° n and lwo schools have a 
^ mkwJl j where new pupils arc inducted 
. TW. Secondary school ciirrinnlum 


1 66 out of 173 have no computoy foreign language 
(00%) 



H2oul oil 73 havs no compulsory design or 
• * practical subject ( 82 K) 


’ |l|«» IIIUUVIVU 

school curriculum. Qrounlna oraotlCM In London oomjjrohanalvo low*, schoote 

vidence of curriculum con- ■ ■ . “1 


.TVm school curriculum. 

cv * dence of curriculum con- 
^ offered in the 

to It!? be,lr a Mrong resembl- 
as a pupil of one of 


Second Years 


m hZi “ a pupil of one of 

ftiu between 1945 and 1948. It is Streaming end Banding 

FrB *scb ((j r an “”?" ce ; R E. physical education, ■ ' . e _„, ~ 

^sphv a^.° t ^ er f° re ^n language), history. Banding an d 8ettlng _ 

Sm Rnd P racllcaI crofts. setting 
»ot ottS l . on lhese d H5' “ 


Third Years 


■8 •• 


1 


1 aw mi uui’iia 

pien km "J 91 °f 169 scliools serving 
.^RcipJe - 7® *8* of 14 (four schools in 

^CSvnr 10 18 sch00ls) - 

of cascs other subjects are 



Setting : — 


Banding, Settlngand Mixed-ability 


Setting and Mixed-ability 


Mixed-ability 


Numbers *» No's of school S • 


* or another, 114 of them giving both a regular 

- place on the weekly timetable for it and also 
a providing interviews, advice, libraries of in- 
1 formation, visits and perhaps short-term work 
& experience. 

- London comprehensive® are also taking 
computers seriously. Computer studies are 
offered in 88 schools, either as a subject 
option or as an extra-curricular activity, and in 
another seven the subject is compulsory at 
some stage (including one girls' school). This 
does^show how quickly schools can adapt to 

Some form of community service for pupils 
is mentioned by 63 schools, and 56 schools 
nave some sort of social education in the 
compulsory core for senior years, not neceS- 
sanly as a course for public examinations. 

The« statistics bode well for those looking 
for wider interests js school curricula but the 
picture is not so rosy for those trying to get 
schools to adopt a multi-racial outlook. Of 
course, it is essential to remember here that 
the source of information is only the 
brochures. However, if a school feels a strong 
duty towards its ethnic minority pupils one 
would imagine that this would be expressed in 
a document going out to the parents in these 
minonties. 

We are talking here of a city region with 
vast numbers of ethnic minority children. If a 
particular school does not happen to have 
many of them the school down the road does. 

Only 34 of the 173 schools mention multi- 
racialism or mulit-cutiuralism. In 11 of these 
cases the reference is exclusively to a new 
agreed, multi-racial RE syllabus in one 
borough. Just 23 schools go out of, their way in 
their account of their educational philosophies 
to mention a multi-cultural society,. and this in 
a sample of half the comprehensive schools in 
one of the most multi-racial cities in the world. 

Moreover, if anyone expects a mention of 
children who are handicapped In some way 
they are likely to be even more disappointed. 
The wamock report and the 1981 Education 
Act are very recent and only three schools 
specifically mention handicap. 

Bultock is dead; <mly two schools mention 
language across the curriculum in the 
brochure. Finally, of 107 mixed schools 18 
make a point of providing the full range of 
practical crafts regardless of sex. and two girls' 
schools make provision for design/technology 
work and one for woodwork. In statements of 
aims, objectives and programmes only three 
schools make a reference to equal opportuni- 
ties for both sexes. . 


Alan Weeks is a senior lecturer Ip education at 
St Wary's College, Twickenham. 

























I .'1 


M:uii 


iw'vflT 't 1 



m n — ■— — MW — i ran ■ — m ■ ran 1 u — ir r — i it m n ~iM- — * — i ■ bn n— — 

ocial nriorities 


Extracts from the diary of a headteacher in a Merseyside social priority junior school. 




very respectful niul friendly), ft Was 
ilcvulcil that mum should speakl 
her social worker about the pra bi ein 
•tinned, n, oily. Thu EWOwemCh 
Uw mother to discuss the problem 
w,th the social worker, who reported 
hack that the elder hoy’s problem 
was to he dealt with first, and Tim’t 
problem would probably be solved 

hy this. 


November 6 


Mrs H eventually came to school 
after several written invitations to 
discuss her nine year old daughter 
Mary's anti-social behaviour outside 
school. This was affecting her 
classroom and general school 
behaviour, with a detrimental effect 
on the other children. 

Mrs H confirmed that Mary had 
been detained by the police in the 
company of a group of older 
children, who had all been sniffing 
glue. When f mentioned that it had 
came to my notice that Mary was 
believed to be visiting an older man's 
flat and leaving with money in her 
possession, Mrs H did not express 
surprise and seemed to know who 
the man was. She agreed that Mary 
was getting out of control and 
accepted that she would have to 
contact me for help if the situation 
continued. 

The following day, a concerned 
parent called to mention to me that 
the rumour of “glue sniffing" was 
being spread in the school, among 
the children. Mary had been talking 
about her exploits as a meuns of 
getting attention from her peers. 

November 9 


I attended a review meeting at the 
local social services department 
about Tim, an 11-year-old who had 
been placed in local authority care 
for the past six months, during which 
time he had been in two foster 
hqmes. Tim had flourished 
physically, socially and emotionally 
during this period of time and these 
Improvements were reflected in his 
attitude to his academic work. At the 
meeting, the decision was made that 
Tim should return tn his mother who 
had previously been found an 
inadequate parent, hut whom the 
social services now fait wus ready 
again to take bn the responsibility of 
her child. 

1 asked that a very dose watching 






made any uncharacteristic behaviour 
explainable. I assured Mrs O that we 
would keep a sensitive watch over 
her child and contact her if we felt 
the need. 


Mrs II visited to discuss her worries 
about her smi, John. She explained 
that she was divorced from his 
father, who had hecn her second 
husband. She also Imd a grown-up 
family from her first marriage, one 
child at university, the other an 
accountant. She explained that she 
found it difficult to relate to John 
and she was aware that her attitude 
was contributing to his unhappiness, 
and his inability to relate to his 
classmates, f regarded her visit as a 
"cry for help" and after discussing 
the problem with John’s class teacher' 
(who was nware of the existence of u 
problem) it was suggested that 
perhaps if Mrs U became involved 
inside the school, it might help her 
relationship with her son. She readily 
agreed to work with her son's class 
teacher each week within the 
classroom. 




Mrs H came In to school jo ask me 
td. contact a social worker to help her 
.With Mary, whom she just could not 
control. I immediately rang (he social 
services ^ith!the' details'.. 


November 1 


MARY 


l bad. an Interview with' the social • ■ 
worker tfho was hoping to assist Mrs 
K with lier prOblent; daughter. Maty. 
1 was: al% to provide background 
totormatjbri.before a home visit wife 


November 18 


Aftet deterioration if) his general 
behaviour, Bob-ran homo, .after . 
being reprimanded by his teacher tor. 
his disruptive- behaviOUt Uv dittos., ?.'■ 

mum to Visit senow previously to .... 


discuss the early signs of these 
behaviour problems, I used (his 
opportunity to call at the hnine. I 
had n long chat about dob's 
unacceptable boh nv tour in school nml 
I also mentioned Ills apparent 
unhappiness and insecurity. Mum 
agreed that he was out of control at 
home, and one reason for the 
behaviour problem, was the unstable 
home situation. Mum freely admitted 
that Bob, who is 11, probably spent 
most of the day wondering whether 
his mum would be there when he 
arrived home after school. He 
desperately wanted to trust the 
adults that he came across in his 
family situation but had been. let ' 
down too often. 

In the period 'prior to Bob's present 
problems, mum had left her second 
husbnpd (Bob's stepfather) and her 
six children, to run off with her 
boyfriend. The children had been 
sent tp different relatives during th/s 


I H -lilia i' : T* 1 n f 4 


gran's, changed. School for two- r- 
tnbnthS, and during this. period fell- 
into trouble with the pdlice.' He jfek, ; 
a edurt case peinding, resulting from 
thlstroublfe? -i . 

Bob'S mi^m accepted that, a malq ' 
sbiAal 1 \yorker might; help to; give. Bob 
a good male’ figure to look upto.v- 
\yhch X returned .to school, Bob; was 

hiding In. tha ! clbAkro6in^: i ■•'■r-h-V 1 


December 9 


1 contacted the health visitors' 
department concerning n seven-yen r- 
old whose social behaviour wus 
regressing so severely that he 
appeared to be returning to pre- 
school behaviour; unoblc to use 
cutlery, enuresis, soiling etc. His 
dirty general appearance was mnking 
him Into a figure of fun with the 
children throughout the school. This 
hnd been mentioned to mum on 
several occasions und clothing had 
also hecn provided to help the 
situation. 

The hcnllh department promised 
help. 


past two nights Iiclmm.sc he laid said 
(lint his mum wasn't ut home, .mil he 
didn't like the woman that his mum 
had told him to go to. I cautioned 
Mrs II and explained dial I'd have to 
contact (he social services 
department to check on die 
situation. I was particulariy 
cimcumcd (hat this arrangement 
should nut he left uuiiivcstigatcd as 
the weekend approached, and 
because this parent (on her own with 
three young children) was unable to 
control her own eldest child, Mary. 1 
said to Mrs H that Mary nnd Boh 
were very bad company for each 
other, and she agreed, nnd left me to 
deal with the situation. 

Events moved very fust subsequently 
that duy und the billowing few days. 
Visits were made to the .school hy 
the social worker, the stepfather, the 
police und, eventually, the mother 
and her new man friend. Suffice to 
say that three court cases were 
pending for the family; 
a custody of the three youngest 
children to second husband (Bob’s 
stepfather); 
b existing rent arrears; 
c a case uboul Bob's involvement 
with others in nn attack on u youth. 



The Iicnlth Visitor rang to sny Dial 
she was going to visit the home with 
a social worker. 


December 15 


MABY 


Mrs H (Mary's mum) came in during 
the lunch hour to npk me vaguely if 
I’d seen Mary as she'd not seen her 
since 6.00pm the previous evening. 
When I ascertained that she had not 
called either the police, social 
services or her child’s social worker, 

I insisted that she did so. During the 
afternoon, a police officer called to 
sfefcjf any other children knew of 
Matys whereabouts, On ringing the 
PQjito thateyening I'learnecfthat ’ 
Mary Hjjd bien found that afternoon 
at a house in the neighbourhood. 


December 16 


Mrs H brought Maty to school and 
told me of the happenings of tbe 
previous day and n|ght. I rang the 
Social services tb ensure that they 
were frilly aware of the situation. 


January 11 


Mrs M came into school, bringing 
Alan, who hud run home during the 
lunch hour. Mum was anxious nnd 
weep, and after u while when she 
calmed down, she admitted that her 
worries derived from fears for her 
child's safety (and nut the teacher's 
attitude (u (he child, which she had 
Initially used ns the reason fur her 
child running home). The real 
problem was a combination of her 
own poor mental und physical 
health, und her fears tlmt her ex- 
husband might once again "kidnap" 
Alun mid take him nut i>r the 
country. Mrs M promised (n keep in 
close touch with the school about the 
situation. 


January 22 


Mrs T called to tell me that shu'd 
referred her child (Bill) through her 
doctor to a child psychiatrist because 
she couldn't eopc with him ut home, 
The child was no problem at school, 
but we had our suspicions of possible 
abuse and had sunt a social worker 
to visit the home some months ago. 


February 10 


Hob appeared in court nnd was 
found guilty. A care order was give* 
by the magistrate. The social worker 
came to explain that although Bob 
had been placed on a care order, (he 
social worker was attempting to work 
closely with the mother and the child 
to try nnd improve the home 
situation to prevent the necessity of 
Bob being taken away from his home 
und placed in local social services 
care. A meeting was arranged by the 
social worker at school with the 
mother, but she did not arrive, 
although a reminder note had been 
sent the previous night. I explained 
my misgivings about Bob's 
deteriorating behaviour which had 
caused me to remove him from his 
classroom situation to enable the 
remainder of the class to work 
without disruption. 1 emphasized tta 
this situation could not continue 
indefinitely, and that I felt that bis 
unsettled home situation was 
preventing any Improvement. 
KaKBsnfiBBEBBssaa^HnBi 

February 26 


Reports about Bill were sent to the 
child psychiatrist, to whom I also 
spoke directly on the phone. 



February 3 


After hygiene Inspection, Mrs H 
(Mary’s mum) was visited by rite 
nurse who left a comb, lotion and 
instruct ions for keeping the child at 
home und treating her problem. 


March 5 


Mary wax sent to school. As no one 
was at home to receive her, she jw 
kept on her own by my room. TK 
health visitor attempted 10 
mother, but twice received no reply- 


March 8 

MARY 

Mary arrived in school. I asked 1^* 
cheek to be made on her lt« r » 
because she hud no clearance 
On inspection both Maty and 
brother proved to be infested, 
one wus at home again 
them. Both children remained uy.w 
room all day. » 


Tim’s mother phoned school tp 
...report that Tim Was refusing to come 
to school. I asked the educational 
welfare officer to bring the child and 
parent to school. She did this 
immediately, and In the presence of 


the EWO, class teacher, myself, 

K arent and child, the very disruptive 
onto life was; divulged. The regular 


beating* of, the mother (to extort 


January 8 


fyyfyg M^'^th them tor, the , 


money), by the older 14-year-old son 
was discussed. It was. apparent that 
Tim wbb getting ids attention at 
home by staying at home ns much us 
possible. He. had been living at 
another child's house for some days, 
and was truanting from there. 

Tim's altitude to his mother at these 
meetings Were insolent and resentful 
(Unlike this child’s normal attitude to 
other adults , which was generally 


Bill arrived at school with 
bruising about his cheeks, n . • 
forehead which he ! • 

saying that he had walked into a . 

door. Mum came tosf® ha <j ■ , 

teacher and admitted that ' ■ . 

made the b rtiise s ^ 

tamper with the child. Th , j, 

reported the situation 

began alerting procedures ( .. 

suspected/confinned cl 1 . / 

case. A social worker ^ 

social services andwent mse^ 
mother concerned to ask . by a ' ■ '■ 

taking Bill to be examined oy ^ 

doctor- At3. 1 5imt m^ n tb% . ; 

worker came to te ^ A ca $e • 
were going to the do^°r- ^ 


T he 1944 Education Act quite clearly and 
deliberately gave the right to parents to 
have their children "educated in accord- 
ance with the wishes of parents". The 
only limitations were; compatibility “with the 
provision of efficient instruction und training" 
and the “avoidance of unreasonable public 

expenditure". 

The widely repented claim among main- 
tained primary school teachers tlmt individual- 
ized teaching and learning is the principle on 
which they work mokes it difficult to see how 
parental rights can lie denied in primary 
schools on the grounds of "unreasonable pub- 
lic expenditure". The only ground on which 
they can fail to respond to parental wishes is 
that the kind of education desired is not com 
patibie with "efficient instruction". 

Family grouping, flexibly arranged class- 
rooms, resource centres, individual reading 
and mathematics schemes and group activities 
are some of the ways primary school rhetoric 
has been translated into practice. Some of it i< 
excellent, as I can testify from an OECD 
investigation made of primary schools in 
Leicestershire some years ago. In other cases 
principles are lost in practices which are used 
to excuse failure to know what an individual 
child is capable of and to assess the level at 
which he or she is achieving. 

Individualized teaching and learning can 
mean the absence of syllabuses in mathematics 
and English. Such “progressive practices" ex- 
cuse failures to know what a child should have 
been taught at various stages of its primary 
school career. Consequently there are no ways 
of knowing what a child should have learned. 

Glaring cases of abject failure, maladjusted 
or violent behaviour are likely to be noticed 
and brought to the attention of the “experts" 
outside the school employed by a local author- 
ity. For the rest, diagnostic procedures are 
regarded with suspicion if not horror. 

But without these procedures it is not legiti- 
mate to claim that each child is being taught 
according to its individual needs, ago, or apti- 
tude. in the absence of acceptable evidence a, 
head teacher cannot really defend a claim that to. 
respond to parental wishes would be incompati- 
ble with efficient instruction. 

So the question of parental rights turns on 
the professional competence of primary school 
teachers and on their willingness to nccepl the 
Iw. My own recent experience persuades me 
Ijnat some primary school head teachers, at 
wk.,are not prepured to accept the intention 
?! Scc l' on of the 1944 Act und have little 
low of the aptitudes and abilities of the chil- 
dren under their care. They presume to tell 
parents how their children should be educated. 

You should realize that aesthetic subjects 
are Just as important us academic subjects", 
reaa ono of my daughter's school reports, 
remaps so - but it is not the responsibility of 
J™ 5 lcl1 l iarenls what they should wish 
Mnelr child. Nor is it proper, under the Act, 

2 a head teacher to state (hat it is not her 
Wry school's business to prepare a child for 
J^ry school of his or her parents' 

Children at this school are expected to prnc- 
np recorder nnd violin at home "bccuuse 
sJL 6ft .i ,t " but ncitflemic homework is 
Warently taboo. How can primary school 
**__ J s . ft5Sunle aesthetic subjects are satis- 
3 o , ? n J°Y Q blc while ncudcmic subjects 
w lather? I want my daughter ut least to 
"prim Qp P° rtu nity of finding out. 

rnary school teachers usurp powers which 
r? ve not been given when they clnim to 
parents should wish to have their 
trantPH , T bey deny to parents rights 

r%Q , ° lbem ‘when they refuse to accept 

jng JJ™. ,hat my daughter should gain entr- 
kL m - * ^noWned independent secondary 
fWy. be politically unacceptable to some 
THn-nSii? 1 is by no means an unlawful 



daughter had performed badly and that she had 
not been stimulated or taught to write creatively, 
love mathematics or enjoy reading - components 
I would have thought of any good general 
primary school education. I was unable to 
discover what mathematical skills she had been 
taught, and what she had not been taught. Her 
reading age, [ discovered, varied between just 
above her chronological age and a good way 
below it. 

What we could not agree on was her ability 
- crucial to any argument that to prepare her 


Learning 

the part 


ai *d compatible with effi- 
l ~ t Wh° is to judge aptitude and 

...tni absence of careful nnd compre- 
. fecord^ fr may be a matter of a 


bead teacher could claim 
miJr ” er I° b 10 prepare children for 
sc * u, °1- An excellent 
- C0Trt P rcbc,,s l v e school whs rc- 


■ywflendikrf „ r ■'•Mwuanro SCI1UOI whs rc- 

table. 

without further evidence, to 
ffldd wits "just uverugo". The 
Jl. f^tofd , however, that my 


T eacher: (Hesitantly) Well . . the point is 
that other people have been complaining 
that he smells. 

Parent: What do you mean, smells7 
Teacher: I know it's difficult but I’m worried 
for his sake. Hove you noticed the problem at 
home7 

Parent: Are you saying he doesn’t wash? 
That's an insult. You should team him not 
smell him. 

Teacher takes a deep breath and, reflecting 
wryly on the peculiarities of the profession, 
prepares to negotiate. ' 

Four feet away two' more adults face each 
other across a school desk. 

Teacher: Yes, I do understand your concern, 
Mrs Lawrence, but I am never for away and I 
keep a close eye on what the student Is doing 
with the class. ' 

Mother: The trouble is that Karen has always 
enjoyed her English lessons with you but now 
they have a studenf teacher she just seems to 

have given up. : " , 

Teacher: (obviously embarrassed and with a 
grin that does not quite fit . the occasion) wall, 
everybody has to start some time. . 

Similar conversations, some quite ariimaled 
and others more relaxed are taking p ace 
around the room. There is a great ^deaT of 
energy being devoted towards the various ex- 
changes. An outsider might be oppressed by 

the rommitntent but wouljl 

as to why a parents’ evening should be taking, 

place at 11 o'clock on Tuesday morning. 

P Tlii student teachers, however, .enter 
wholeheartedly into the spltil fj*'.'™' 
since they have accepted the idea of role play 


as a learaingfleaching technique. This particu- 
lar exercise was offered as part of the POCE 
secondary course at the School of Education in 
the University of East Anglia. 

There were three strands of thought in our 
minds when we first created this. They were 
firstly to deal with a practical area of the 
teaching job which can so easily be neglected 
in a training course. Secondly, we wanted to 
introduce the student teachers to some of the 
powerful effects df role play as a teaching 
device In a way which we fee] is far more 
effective than simply telling them about it. 
Finally, and above all, by giving them the role 
of both teacher and parent wo hoped to extend 
their understanding of the needs of both par- 
ties. 

The qecessary materials are very simple and 
consist of b teacher’s information sheet and a 
matching set of cards for parents. On the 
teacher's sheet are details of a class of pupils 
in' the last term of their third year when the 
selection of subject options is topical. Each 
child is given a surname, a grade for academic 
achievement and another for effort, together 
with a brief comment. For example in the case 
of the two conversations. above the comments 
are:*r 

FOX: Academ|c C; Effort C. Smells. Other 
puplfs complain. 

LAWRENCE: Academic C; Effort C. Student 
has been teaching the class for the last three 
weeks. Seems to be getting on reasonably well. . 

Half the group is designated as teachers, 
They have the same sheet .and 'are positioned 
behind desks around the room. They each 
write a label giving their name and subject and 
have a chair placed conveniently to receive a 
parent. 

The remaining students take the role of 
parents. Each takes a parent card at random 
froth a pile, fn : the example above, the Fox 
card simply reads "You have a good rela- 
tionship with ybur child" and the Lawrence 
cahi gays, "Your child was getting on quite well 
byt has complained that he/she has been con- 
fused :and disorganised by the teaching of the . 



for a school of my choice would not be com- 
patible with efficient instruction. In (he belief 
that as a child from a middle class home my 
daughter's IQ could not be adversely affected 
by class, I asked for her IQ. This was not 
known and could not be taken except by 
reference to a local, authority psychologist. As 
a child with no obvious difficulties - that is she 
was giving the school no trouble - it was not 
possible to refer her to a psychologist even to 
take her IQ. < 

It was a case of a head teacher’s opinion 


renL? Sl uIh« ° f reaso,labI y well educated pa- 
rents who are not unused to assessine 

,C abi,lt y and «ot unmindful of the 

Sn?« « F nS K- ? VC Can in,roduce fn>o asses* 

teft iL?L B !t See T ed 10 ‘bat an IQ 
test would help us to diagnose the difficulties 

of an orally articulate child so we had it taken 
privately. It turned out to be 126 which put 

re B r dln bC T ‘7°. years behind In terms of the 
j cve she was “Pnble of. 

Under such circumstances what rights have 
parents? *ITie head teacher said she would call 
in a reading _ specialist and conceded that my 

SLfvm d B n01 been certain ariih- 

metical skills. But no suggestion was made that 
rny daughter would be helped to enter a school 

Waran^ r r= m lS 

but to accept the head teacher's only susses- 

*2" ‘J 18 ! “V daughter should "leave^he 

■' not risk send >ng her to another 
maintained primary school. 

mpIf S ^rr' Brian H ° lmes * head of the Depart- 


student who is on teaching practise at the 
school. They then introduce themselves to a 
teacher and by giving their child a fust name 
indicate whether they are talking about a son 
or a daughter. 

This process continues for three or so inter- 
views. The parent lakes on a different identity 
each time and moves from teacher to teacher. 
After this roles are exchanged. 

Our intention has been to provide a flexible 
framework within which the encounters can 
develop. Much is left to the initiative of the 
participants. At the same rime these situations 
represent a cross-section of those which we 
nave experienced in reality. 

Some interviews are difficult because there 
is very little to be said. We all know the 
feeling of trying to talk about the pupil who is 
well behaved, average in aQ respects and 
makes very little impact on the class. 

Other situations relate to Implied criticism 
of the parent or direct criticism of the teacher- : 
Some confront the teacher with questions: of 
| professional loyalty and others involve a mls- 
f match of expectations and perceptions. ' ' 1 

As with so many suceessnil teaching activi- 
ties (he basic idea is simple. Our student 
teachers enjoy (he session and comment 
favourably on the experience. They’ understand 
its purpose and although (hey find the de- 
mands tiring they get a glimpse ipio the pa- 
rent/tcacher relationship with all its problems 
and possibilities. As a result of their partieipa- : 
lion we hope they will have a greater under- r 
standing of the potential of role play for 
in yolvfcment and learning. 

Parent; . . . but' what does It leach (horn 
pretending to be a Viking? Why don’t you givi : 
them some notes and teach' them property? . 
Bernard Ambrose, Jack Bull, 

Susan Maclennan 

The authors are lecturers at the School of 
Education University of East Ariglia, Keswick 
Hall, Norwich and are. willhig to . share theft 
materials with other 'teacher trainers wtid send d . 
stamped addressed envelope. 



•Z'S'i 


imast HcnwaB 


ft# 


















THKTIMUI EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT H lMl 




U ? 


:• n . ' ) 

HI. .'I 




m 




w -7»r 



Most television playwrights are in no doubt 
that they practice nn art as well as a cruft, and 
the importance they claim within the industry 
is based, not always wisely, on the first not the 
second. Faber have just published n collection" 
of pieces by seven of them (all male, nil white 
- no “positive discrimination" from Faber & 
Faber). The pieces vary in quality, style and 
subject. One is nn Interview with Trevor Grif- 
fiths, one is extracts from n stage piny by Peter 
Prince. There is reminiscence by Hownrd 
Schumann and advice on dramatizations from 
Hugh Whitemore. Julian Mitchell sees the 
future of television drama, or perhaps just his 
own, in the writing of “television novels" in 
weekly parts. David Edgar makes a defence of 
drama-documentary while David Hnre attacks 
the censorship and asserts the superiority of 
film to videotape. 

Differing in many ways, the writeis share n 
common assumption, that (he television play- 
wright is an artist, and should therefore con- 
trol both the work itself and the way in which 
it is presented. But what sort of art is a 
television play, or a multi-part television 
biography of some Edwardian duchess, or a 
dramatization of Gissing? 

Because most people are not artists, it is 
easy to think of the arts as if they were a job 
lot, different in detail but of the same kind. 
There is an Arts Council; its staff includes 
Officers for Music, Literature, Dance, Drama, 
and the Visual Arts, but they all write the 
same sort of position papers in the same sort 
of prose. Political parties have policies for the 
Arts. Omnibus and The South Bank Show are 
'Arts programmes". What is ignored, most 
often by the artists themselves, is a fun- 
damental difference between kinds of art, 
which 'Is whether they are by their nature 
public or private. 

A painting, a sculpture, a poem, a piano 
sonata, even a string quartet may be enjoyed 
by very few and require few resources' most of 
Schubort's chamber works were composed for 
private enjoyment, and not published until 
after Iris death. Of such works, even perhaps 
of a novel, wc may say, “Itself is what it is fori 
Tlio artist makes a statement, n comment, a 
jatiem, a piece of.se(f-cxpres$ipn or whatever, 
t may bfc received by onfe person or none, a 
few or millions, but it is not for the millions; it 
Is for itself.” In sqch a case, interference with, 
the artist's creation must be wrong. 

Now .enters (stage left) Economics. A sym- 
phony, a play, a ballet, n film, a telovision 
play are .complicated artefacts. The creative' 


Protecting the public 
story-tellers 

John Bowen on the importance of the single television play 


artist requires the assistuncc of interpretative 
artists - musicians, dancers, actors, a director, 
stage management, cameramen. Time is re- 
quired, and space, and elaborate equipment, 
and the expenditure of a great deal of money. 
These works of art are public. They cannot 
exist unless they attract audiences large 
enough to pay for (hem. They cannot any 
longer be for themselves alone; they must also 
be for an audience. Economics is the master of ■ 
aesthetics, and a television playwright, in par- I 
ticular. had better know it; for other public ; 
artists, subsidy is sometimes able to blur 
reality. 

The contributors to Ah l Mischief denounce 
censorship, as writers should, but their anger 
seems to be because of the damage done to 
the work; it is a private anger. Only David 
Edgar makes the point that censorship insults 
as well us deprives the audience , since the 
censor works on the assumption that viewers 
are more stupid, more corruptible, less uble to 
make reasonable choices than she or he. None 
mentions the two forms of censorship which do 
not directly ban, but nevertheless diminish the 
audience's ability to respond, censorship by 
scheduling and by treatment. 

First, scheduling. At 10.30, five nights a 
week, and not much later on the other two, 
many television sets are switched off, because 
many people, even in Mrs Thatcher's Britain, 
still have to get up early to go to work. Any 
programme scheduled so that U is still In 
progress after 10.30 pm is effectually deprived 
of most of the working-class audience, and 
confined to those who can go to bed Inter. 

Alternatively, the work may be confined to 
BBC2. This . form, of censorship is not as effee-. 
live as it was, because BBC2 does not try to 
attract as wide and os numerous nn audience 
as it can and both snooker and the 1TV strike 
have helped. In any cose, though one may 
believe that the .first duty of a public artist is 
to reach the public, nrt dies without experi- 
ment, and there are publics within the public , \ 


Adolescent antennae 

Shetta MacLeod on one of television’s most problematic areas 


Look! and Smiles. Contra! Telovision. 


Adolescence is a time of ambivalence and 
paradox. Two of its most pressing needs are 
the search far nil adult personal identity and,, 
concoipitnntly, the opportunity to participate 
Jn a su^culturte. Television; being tile medium 
Of thd. normV-lhe Jstereotype and the least 
commbn denominator, liule. truck with the 
' former and tends to' make only token; gestures 
.V almost Inevitably Centred on rock music -r in 
the pirecUdn Of the : lntier. -As one 17-ycnr-old 
ai^uB&riance put It, “Ninety-nine per cent of 
ibe time they Ignore, the existence of people of 
|my Me.. Then they shove us all into a (dxple- 
:Hve -deleted) ghetto with Janet Street Porter, 
and-think they’ve done their bit." . 

•' ■ Ahtbng the pro gHimm e-makers . themselves 


• don't' .wqhjh/teiqvlsjon one top-ninkiog^exi 
ecptlvfe toJd me. .^They've got befrer thingi to . 
doifylth their- lives a When they're 26 6r sd they 
drop ib apd 'start viewing again Spedal prog- 
rftmmes 'ajre,q Vypsfe of- llfne and. money. He 
seemed unaware': that his pragmatic and indeed- 
normative concept of viewing habits. amounted', 
to A form '6f censorship* 1 when ’I pointed out/ 
rnthdr everyone thought ; as,he 

did ^nothing ;’VVould ever change* .he:- replied, 
bligeiy., ^ori^hy ^hould it? . There’s 'no need 1 
for >‘chknge : ;’! :ll suspect- : Hk’viOW tb ' be * tnore ! 
preyMent thfiP’lis'. immediately 'apparent; If 
OhOw itself ijbt;;oMy r in :• the bjoridness Of such 
recent fcffOrtB ias Qfanada ^ Ytstting Driy.but' jn; 

r h. I I jL — ll«‘ Wnira'* kl 



which may more easily he reached on a minor- 
ity channel. More alarming is the possibility 
(hat, within five years of the opening of Chan- 
nel Four, the controllers of the independent 
network may have succeeded in confining all 
“serious" drama to it. It may not worry (he 
private artists, but by God it worries me. 

Censorship by treatment is more subtle, and 
most practised by the BBC. The principle is 
that serious subjects should he tackled in a 
serious way - not often, you understand, but 
seriously; this particularly applies to plays set 
in Northern Ireland. Long glum scenes nrc 
separated by fades into and out of black and 
played portentously. It never fails; you can 
almost hear the audience, falling away like 
pebbles into the dark. 

Television can corrupt. It can corrupt me 
and you and Mrs Whilchouse, not by showing 
scenes of sex and violence, or inciting us to 
distrust the police and question (he wisdom of 
learned judges, but by being always the same, 
by avoiding what is upsetting - avoiding chal- 
lenge, in fact, and therefore the possibility of 
response - by avoiding nil those ureas of moral 
choice with which drama is particularly con- 
cerned. 

So far the progress of British television 
towards that form of corruption has been 
slowed by the principle, applied by both the 
TBA and the BBC, that “public service broad- 
casting" should educate and inform ns well os 
entertain. Nevertheless several of the emmner- 
! 'cial companies are already using the services of a 
j an Amcrican-stylc computer-firm to tell them* 

I “what the public wants". A computer never 
can do this, of course, becnusc we are the 
public and we san'l be sure of what we want] 
until we see it, and even then our responses] 
mny not be immediate. The computer snys 
whnl n majority of the public has watched, not 
necessarily wanted (thu choice may have hcciii 
[ante dc mieux), and attempts to collate elc-| 
ments common to popular programmes trans- 
mitted in the recent past, us if one could put; j 


.they could all endorse: that there should he no 
separate programmes for teenagers on televi- 
sion; that drama should purtray adolescents 
alongside adults, treating both with equal 
seriousness or humour, us appropriate; that 
documentaries should do the same without 
stigmatizing teenage behaviour as either social- 
ly unacceptable or inherently risible; nnd that 
discussion programmes should Involve more 
young people ns a mutter of course without 
labelling them as teenage spokcspeoplo. In 
other words, despite all the flak, the patroniz- 
ing, nnd the throwing up of adult hands in 
horror, It is probably fair to say that teenagers 
see themselves ns emerging adults, interested 
and engaged by the same concerns as the rest 
of us. 

Such was the premise underlying Central’s 
two-hour feature film, Looks and Smiles , 
based on the novel of the same name anti 
scripted by Barry Hines. Shot in black nnd 
white and filmed mainly on location in Shef- 
field, its theme was unemployment, the politics 
and> poetics of die dole queue. The central 
characters were JrHph and Alan, two school- 
leavera,::apd.Xaren, Mick's girl friend, who 
Workcdjri p, shoe shop. Mick, wanted to be a 
motor mechanic , and tried in vain; for an 
apprenticeship. Alan tried fqr what seemed to 
be die. only alternative: joining the Army, 
where he learned to use plastic bullets and to 
despise, the Catholic population of Belfast. 
They, both came from stable families, but 
Karen's parents were separated. Sho lived un- 
epsily with her bipther f : whose boy friend she 
loathed arwj longed ... for her absent father, 
unaware that he now had another family, ] 

The story was told uhemphntically, moving 
- from high-rise fiat to, disco, from Wimpy bar to 
: employment office, and from depressed cltys-, 
'cape to scrubby semi-rural surroundings with a 
mixture of primness, and tenderness. The lives 
.portrayed were, bleak, but not altogether de : 
Void of 'humour or transcendence, It) the face 


Michelangelo's David together with bits fmm 

ilrnSr Tha ‘ r ° Ud i5 8,1 

Worn early times, questions of right acd 
vymng behaviour, have been presented Z 
dicusscil in stones. The stories have taken 
ill (fere nt forms both between cultures and 
within cultures, and they still do. In Britain 
and most of the industrialized countries i 
majority of the jjopulatlon does not read 
novels, never goes to the theatre and seldom 
to the cinema; the appetite for stories remain*, 
and must be satisfied by television. 

Those artists who nrc story-tellers - who 
perform that necessary tnsk in society - must 
therefore have access to television, and mx 
just ;U its fringes. They should be helped to 
s |HNik to as ninny ns will listen; - moral ideas 
are not confined to an dlile in a healthy 
society. They, in return, should not make 
private art in a public place. There is a respoa- 
nihility, however complex the ideas, to be 
accessible. There is n responsibility to tell a 
story. 

However much television's administrators 
mny believe (on inadequate evidence) that tbe 
public docs not like plays, and anyway series 
and serials arc more controllable, however 
much ambitious and underpaid writers may 
wish to be commissioned to write “lelevhhn 
novels", the single play must be the main 
; source of such stories. The time to show, the 
money to make drama programmes is limited; 
every 13-hour novel denies a hearing to 12 
other voices. And story-tellers die; new ones 
must replace them, must learn their craft and 
make a reputation. New writers will not be 
commissioned to write long and expensive 
works; they must begin within a series of 
plays. 

It is sometimes said that plays arc not "ex- 
citing" these days. If so, it may be became 
there are so few of them, that producers play 
safe. Artistic excellence flourishes ift quantity, 
not scarcity. Experienced writers must be 
-allowed sometimes to tread water, new writers 
to try out a voice, and above all the public to 
become accustomed to the regular exercised 
judgment nnd empathy. I om myself prov- 
ing u scries of 10 single plays for London] 
Weekend, and, although it's n long way be- 
tween production and scheduling, It is at least 
a start, and ono commercial company his 
made it. It requires continuation, however. .; 

*“Ahl Mischief 1 ’. Edited by Frank Pike. 
Faber £2.‘H. 


•Usings are ns they arc. it seemed to say, 

'in being so. say wluil they moon. 

Everyone involved in l.oaks and SmjW 
seivcs the most fulsome praise. Wming. 
direction (Kcii Loach), design (Martin Johfr 
son), camera-work (Chris Mengcs) and wins 
wow uil of » piece: committed, unprolent^ 
and sensitive. Mow seldom this Is to be 
in the general run of telovision progm* 
where the various skills seen) to be. 
ono another for attention. Graham ’ 
Carolyn Nicholson and Tony PiU were w , 
lously good ns the three teenagers «■ 
difficult to believe that they were aj y 
inexperienced. Again, how seldom jg 
slon drama take such risks. Looks a 
is not just on honest effort: it 1* 
through and through. . m g 

The snng, in the present con ext, s ^1 
really Isn't television at all. It ls 
has been shown widely in - cfoo- 

was awarded the Prize for Contempo Jn 
ma at last year's Cannes ^ <*** 

other words, the Impetus and initl 
from a film company and no : a 
company. And, while we musi be gf 




rarely like this? It clearly 
money, because the budget for ,j ( j| 
Smiles was hardly astronomical. .^ ■ ^ 
rather n matter of the imapn ^jj*: 
which characterizes tliinki*>B * P. J* fades* 

snaking level throughqurflie l 
try. And I use the word , industry . 8d tfl|evis}on 
The truth: which few P e °Pj® Drnmm aU W 1 ' 
design to recognize, is that o Nor(8 n 

Just another product ,ik ® “ driver, be p£ 
un uvernge consumer,. like a tPflU 

sumed. Most • drivers want I ra iizado nS 
froni most edrs. But audldS 

cannot bo made about tension 

whatever the ratings say. A .^ |tfn0cr i S y on ll * 
over sensitive to sham fpstantly 

pan of the adult world. wdl Ja8U tii<W: 

from anything ‘Vrhich Is pen» dS® 

tic. This h the reason - not * 1 ff^hemselve^ 
to watch only tclev^' 

m.-j. .r ii.ni inn* Mon t 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 2I.S.82 


inspiratio n at work 


Tbe Living Arts of India. 

Arts Council travelling exhibition, at 
the Serpentine Gallery until May 31 
(hen at Cardiff, Glasgow, Bradford 
and Sheffield. 

Admission free. 

"I prefer working in granite. Wood 
ana soapstone provide greater scope 
for detail, but I am bored by detail. 
There is more pleasure in seeing a 
block of stone come alive in shape 
and form than in carving details like 
the beads of necklaces/’ Devalank- 
unda Vadiraj, sculptor from Banga- 
lore, is presently at the Serpentine 
Gallery to talk about his construction 
of the serenely severe images of Hin- 
du tradition. Together with eight 
other artists - or craftsmen, the dis- 
tinction is rather hard to draw in n 
country where art is so traditional 
and craftsmanship can reach such re- 
finements of perfection - Mr Vadiraj 
is part of an exciting show of 77ie 
Living Arts of India. 

A potter, a bell-metal craftsman, a 
bronze caster, a weaver, an 
embroiderer, a worker in reed-pith. 


"i/calC iSCraf,andthefeeli "8*'>f 


kinds. The optimism and creativity of 
the craftsmen working along any 
dhm city street, their 
pnde in their work and the unself- 
conscious grace with which they pur- 
a h r ® of the experience of 
India which we must be grateful to 
tain A 1 * 5 Council for bringing toBrU 

Some of the crafts are more aUen 
to our eyes than others. TTie worker 
in recd-pith, from West Bengal, for 

° U !i 0f i he U 8‘ lt of 
reeds he rolls, flattens and twists 

lacy patterns, and 


mgs in honour of Knshna make up 
the complement of artists who can 
been seen at work. A kiln for the 
potter and a furnace for the metal 
workers are to be built in Hyde 
Park, weather permitting. Meantime 
inside, Mr Vadiraj models and chips 
at his grand granite. It seems almost 
impertinent to ask someone who so 
dearly knows what he is doing how 
and why he is doing it. Yet he, like 
(he others, is pleased to talk to the 
public and give insights into the tech- 


paper gtues The potter’s art fs stan- 
dard throughout the world, but these 
votive terracotta horses are unique to 

mf n | SU r n '£ y,n &’ c ! a y- &e P*>tters of 
rural India. Castings of beli-metal 
images from resin models which 
evaporate through the porous day 
and straw moulds is specific to India, 
too. These are the arts commissioned 
and loved by the poorer people. 

All the bright colours of Indian 
femininity under the needles of Te- 
jiben Makwana, from Gujerat. With- 
out drawings, she flashes out satin 
stitch, mirror-work, applique; tie- 
dyes and weaves, patch-works and 
chain-stitches as her ancestors did at 
the time of Marco Polo. The results 
are really feasts of colour for people 
in the dry desert country of her 
homeland. In the lusher hills of 


Al( ? i K*™ 1 weaves 

fl?m li J? If , the fmest cloths in 
r™ U , ne L of colour on a black back- 
ground. The speed with which these 

yT'h/ 0 *" a, T« -ME 

SWWEE ,orm nawl «& 

The art of Vithal Das Sharma i* 
more familiar to our eyes Usine 
squirrel hair brushes and 5 lS 

rSrv P R he pa ? nts on c,oth 

J . 0Wn versions “full of 

Krishna 1 e d w J ° y "^ f the traditional 
Krishna stories. The paintings are 

made for the god to wSnd er S and 

Cb J eitv hn ? Se jr a . rt of Gura Ppa 
&om thp , n £u amkari dra ughtsman 
Snik * S j Uth .* 18 more unusual. On 
t h Jy d with buffalo milk and 

stSr?»W r he f d ™ ws story-line 

or iu C u 0f L Rama or Jesus 

or Buddha with bamboo-pens with a 

from ba,,s of hair 0r 
wool, Each different colour has to be 

There are only a 
tew hundred kalamkari artists in ihe 
country. 

You would be hard put to it to 
assemble nine British craftsmen who 
so enjoyed their work and were so 
able to communicate their enjoyment 

Kamara* Ud CnC ^" A * Krishna murUli 
Kamaraj, sculptor of exquisite 
bronzes from Tamil Nadu, says “The 
pattern is always the same, but each 

S e r, W ^ m , ake th ? fi gure from 

which the image is cast the balance 
and the emphasis feel different as 
our inspiration changes and grows." 
lo watch that inspiration at work is 
to taste the concentration of public 
and private worlds in which the Indi- 
an imagination flourishes. 

Victoria Neumark 


Gold, girls 
gunsmoke 

Dr Fergo Rides Again ■ 

Trent V ‘ Ct0riB 1 ® eatre > s,ok e-on- 

An original play with music fresh 
tram the composer's pen, presented 
by Stoke-onTrent s vibrantly earthy 
company under the direction of Peter 
Uieeseman, is an event laden with 
promise. A hotel in a dwindling Wild 
West town, vaguely reminiscent of 
Po Jtenes. is the setting for 
, ferry’s ballad opera which 
tells the bawdy, off beat lale of Fer- 
go s lust for gold in dismal Clapper’s 
Creek. He is accompanied by his 
repellent, bubble gum blowing- assis- 
tant. KJondyke. 

The play is amusing, although the 

En?i S 'r 1 . frequ i I,,, y overplay their 
hand. The script is too thinly spread 
and there is a lack of any precise 
direction, so although it is often in- 


and 


arts 





Tough action on soft option 


S] r Roy Shaw, Secretary- Gun era! of 
uie Arts Council, in opening a one 
day national forum on nrls education, 
sprang characteristically to its de- 
Kf rtter a recent statement by 
wupani Wnldcgrave. Minister with 
r«ponsibilitv for higher nnd further 
mpcBiion, had called the study of 
we arts “softer options", urging n 
shift towards "the sort of subjects 
^ „ 9, *0 underpin economic recov- 
ery. . Sir Roy assorted: “Study of the 
wit is emphatically nut a soft option, 
£ P i r0 j« ■ im intelluctunl and cnui- 
SS disc 'P , ‘»« that cultivates the 
man. ftducnte people without 
l„7 ds , n » d you will produce blink- 

fnrii S °u l f nt , l8 !. !, r n ! ul reeluioeruls who 
l Q rgt what lire Is for." 

Jz “S l,n WILS U discussion on a 
Arts Council consultative 
fc nt ' 7/ |f Art Crmmff and 
CduSS*' c, i l ct 10 cuntiddr the 
SSihn pos i ,ion m ' respect to 
STS' ? nd wtl ^ ln which artists 

tffecHxiu? 0 ! 0rs . m *^ lt wurk niorc 
Mvely together. While its initin- 

m ea must b0 welcomed , 
position, illusiraics dearly ono of 


the greatest difficulties facing arts 
educators: the existence of an admi- 
nistrative no-mati’s-land between the 
Council, the DES and other funding 
bodies such as the UGC and the 
MSC. Whilst prepared to acknow- 
ledge the importance of arts educa- 
tion. they arc all reluctant lo venture 
into wiiat might be thought of as 
vuch others' particular preserves. ’ 
Ironically, Ihe presence of 70-odd 
individuals all uctunlly working in the 
field in itself was testimony to the 
level of activity now being generated, 
in spite of equivocation from the top. 
Naturally, discussion centred on 
structures nnd funding possibilities, 
mid It whs dear thut a good deal of 
lateral thinking and already gone 
into finding wuys and means of set- 
ting up projects and financing them. 
Indeed ft was pointed out that too 
rigid demarcation lines (front the 
DES, for Instance) would tend to 
discourage inlitinlivo. But projects 
were all very well - what was needed 
now were long-term sustained prog- 
rammes. Other speakers were wary 
of thinking which (ended to view arts 


and education as a kind of part 
nership involving different but 
perhaps dangerously self-contained 
specialists. By Isolating education 
provision in the Arts Council, for 
instance, it might be seen (danger 
ously) as a kind of “ghetto” area. 

However, there was. encouraging 
. signs . that 'action of tome sort (at 
feast within the Council] will con- 
tinue. A number of practical recom 
mendations followed discussion, 
many of which th£ Council seems 
willing to consider. Not least of these 
was the need for training (both of 
artists and teachers) and information 
exchange as the most effective means 
of creating a suitable working climate 
for arts education. The national 
bodies were constantly reminded 
from the floor that whether or not 
they were prepared to demarcate (or 
indeed collaborate), they could have 
enormous public relations value by 
developing positive and supportive 
policies to back up the sort of initiatives 
already much in evidence, 

. Andrew Peggie 



> young citizens of Milton Keynes 
visited the Our City exhibition in 
Centra] Milton Keynes, a project 
organized by Milton Keynes Urban 
Studies Centre. Lord Campbell of 
Eskan, chairman of MDton Keynes 


ireYejopment corporation, opened the 
exhibition at the . end of April . It 
shows Ihe growing dly - now housing 
more than 100,000 - through the eyes 
of the people. Most of the entries 
were submitted by schools, mainly 
first and middle. A poster competi- 
tion was held to promote the event; 
that Is what (he youngsters are look- 
ing at. 

Models, paintings, photographs 
and poetry, as weD as handicrafts can 
be seen until May 2? at the Exhibi- 
tion Gallery, Milton Keynes Central 
Library. Daphne Jones 


= L er ?. sc, y fi,nn y» il finally fafU short of 
delivering any decisive punch. 

Wiggins as Fergo, is a spare 

: S,ut Ct fT Zfll,on V Bnd scene in 
which the raw buitockcd doctor is 
romantically assailed by the hotel 
I proprietress (Sarah Neville) is most 
cleverly staged. Roberta Kerr’s 
seething Dulcie, with breasts and bot- 
tom demanding attention, is an en- 
gaging performance. Brian Hickey 
plays Bonston Podmore, the amor- 
Sn^n ! IS P* ng and unintelligent guns- 
jinging son of the proprietress, as a 
low beat Elvis Presley condemned to 
; eatcat s sick by Ben Catchpole, the Jail 
bird. 

The show owes Its musical splci- 
ness to Stuart Johnson, Music Advi- 
sor to Sand well, whose catchy com- 
KplS®” compensation for 

Paul Bench 

Walsall pact 

Festivals tend nowadays to be a kind 

Hi ng ci E us of star ““row. but 
Walsall Council - Labour until that 
party lost overall control In the re- 

♦h 11 . 1 » ,on - s “ wanted something 
that built on its neighbourhood social 

schools** 1 * 11 ** Hn ° comnranit y 
Extending and incorporating last 
years Chamber of Commerce shop- 
ping fortnight. the Council has 
brought in freelance festival organiz- 
er Jim Lagden to keep the celebra- 
tory kettle boiling for three whole 
months, between the Spring (May 
31) and August Bank Holidays. * 
Mr Lagden's principal aim is to 
persuade the people of Walsall - one 
of the largest district boroughs in the 
^ tl - , 5 y ’ enclosing Dnrlaston, 


a i j • y _ msuasion, 

Aldridge, Browp hills and several- 
other towns - that they have more to 
value themselves for than they know. 
Already a new fluidity of information 
and contact-making is raising the 
morale and extending the horizons of 
existing organizations across the 
borough, from drama groups, 
amateur orchestras, youth clubs and 


and cycle racing, r 

Concentrated in the Walsall town 
fortnight - July 11 to August I - will 
* M* 1 , and multi-racial mini 
theatre festivals, majorettes, soap-box 
derby and many other events, mostly 
open-air, the “Welcome to Walsall" 
idea being symbolized at the outset 
with a "Fun Run” in the borough's 
satellite towns. * 


Mrama out of the closet 


sccond-yeitr history stu- 

of ihi their versiH » ° f fi'c 
ai^ Tolpuddie Martyrs . . . 

5 *«inB e ^f' ? eogrQ ? 1,Qrs simulating a 
S?Mam t0Wn P* ann ers as purt of 
common 

?h the -^ days P erl,a P s - 
firemsclves that at lust 

of the educa- 
4a English classroom. 

^Ttaqio , i gr thc hali) and into 
1 other areas of the 

ng Jhfs move along was the 
Drft roa and fho . Whulc 
C.Vt, a e ® n ®^®y conference 
ItfrILFA Drama arid Tape 



M 0, har.s 


ty. Chuirud by Jon 
ters included Perer 
foes and Gavin Bol* 
a * to Nixon's re- 
caUccUon of essays 

^^)' U,e ^ urrlcu ^ ,m 
i'". sensitive paper 
drama, and Fines, 


discussing the relevpftce of drama to 
history teaching, stressed, the import- 
ance of the teacher's - every 
teacher's - recognition of “the drama 
m Sverydny life”. Law courts, board 
meetings and interviews, Chilver sug- 

S estcd. were nothing but formalized 
rnmutic encounters - the Falklands 
Crisis too,, albeit on a larger scale, 
Once this was recognized then work 
in the classroom could become, quite 
literally, a rehearsal for the dramas 
of life. And hence of the very high- 
est importance both for the child ana 
for drama as a subject. For until its 
techniques Were' adopted by other 
subject disciplines it would remmn, 
in Fines' words, “something dJffe-. 
rent, only a hit of fun’ ; something 
vaguely to do with the school play. 

Gavin Bolton linked drama with 

the movement towards child-contred 
education. It was q process, a whole 
way of learning, he said, and ^ such 
hud an urgent cross-curricular fime*. 


lion, although that ip no way invali- 
dated its claims: to individual subject 
status. Concluding his paper on the 
theoretical issues invoivfla,. aoiwn 
recalled a recent npeetlrig with Ivon 
Ulich, passing dd the de-schooler’s 
warning that drama can loo , easily 
become, a prime reinfpreer of the 
“hidden dUmciilum". 

But drama across the whole cufri- 
cqlum? Only:m Leslie Button's brief 
account of his work on dranta end 
the pastoral 'curriculum did. the con- 
ference stray far ‘froin the .arts and 
humanities.' These are early days 
however. The conference was look- 
ing to the future, well aware that at 
the moment John Fines’ contention 
that every teacher is a drama teacher 
might meet with blank looks in many 
a physics department- and produce 
even fewer volunteers to- put tip 
those lights for the next school; play! ^ 

Hugh David f 



Sal 5-3»“ 


Aeschylus’s 

THE ORESTEIA 

"The most important theatricaJ e verit formany yeare, 
and the best account of any Greek play that I have 

SBen (Q**tnMvmy,TLSt 


Present this ad -in advance or on theday -at the Box 


f if. 1 1 4 • T»T»1 T 


(cheques payable to NationaFTheatre) and sae to 
Box Office, National Theatre South Bazik. SE1 , 
Tel;01^92822B2 










a 


arts 

Punch line-up 




lilt: TIMF.S Klim .VI HINAI. SUPPLEMENT 1,4, 



Last Sunday was the seventh celebra- 
tion of Mr Punch's birthday, h was 
actually rather nearer to being 
Punch's 320th birthday, but the Co- 
vent Garden Community Association 
hold their May Fayre and puppet 
festival at the place and approx- 
imately at the time of Mr Punch's 
first documented show, and they 
have done for seven years. 

So the congregation at St Paul’s 
Church was very oddly composed: 
clowns, children and puppets were in 
the majority, with one or two doss 
and adults and a brnss bnnd. “Hi, 
Church", said Professor Crump, en- 
tering on stilts. (Punch performers 
are styled “Professor".) 

The vicar, with a Mr Punch on bis 
hand, spoke of Punch's value as a 
protection against dullness, and of 
the rightness of people enjoying 
themselves. The Punches in the con- 
gregation nodded (heir heads. They 
were very orderly this year; in the 
past they have been known to heckle 
squeakingly throughout the service. 
It ail seems very idolatrous. 

Outside ' in the churchyard the 
lugubrious brass band, conducted by 
a man with a yellow sunshade and a 
sparrow for a baton, rivalled the 
Punch and Judy shows for noise. 
There were about 12 of them around 


Alongside the puppets there were 
performers doing Punch as a live 
character, musicians, performance 
artists, stalls selling health fond, 
plants or jumble, art students dres- 
sed as ostentatiously undercover de- 
tectives, and a number of people in 
brightly coloured uniforms after the 
fashion of the 60s. A little group did 
a play about n princess in u ghostly 
castle in which a 3 year old wenring 
n pillow-case took the part of the 
ghost. 

It was nil very familyish in Ihc best 
possible way, very colourful and 
friendly. Whether Mr Punch was 
wholly in approval of all this har- 
mony is iinotfier question. lie might 
have been more at home outside in 
the piazza, where Sid Rasputin, 
wearing a mini wet suit anil flippers. 

K cr formed tricks to vast crowds who 
e urged to hurst into “si 


apnl 

perfo 


spontaneous 


and boastful performances were, 
after all, Punch's original style. 


Frances Farrer 


the churchyard, ranging in style from 
the old-fashioned seaside type to to- 


day's social satirists. 

rhe trend is towards politics once 


a^ain - Punch was historically a critic 
e pc 

children as well as adults'. There 


oE governments and kings - though 

Foi 


the political shows are usually fun lor 


were several Mrs Thatcher puppets. 
Richard Robinson's puppet show in- 
cludes Prince Charles, Princess Di 
and the new baby, with the crocodile 
for nanny. It is definitely part of the 
Punch tradition although it has no 
Mr Punch. 

Mr Punch is now also returning to 
the streets, though lie often gets 
moved on. Derek Curpeiilcr's Punch 
pupnat, performing outside the 
■National Theatre, once hod a long 
conversation with a policeman on the 
topic of whether he should move or 
not, to the delight of the crowd. Joe 
Beeby Has. been giving shows in the 
Kings Hoad. "A very lively audience 
indeed, those punks", ho reported 
earnestly. "A- good boltie (collection) 
though/' 



Good intentions 


i'.A tough girl C tilled Swig, of whom. 
. the woolliest liberal teachers and the 


WQttcsl probation officers In town 
despair. Is brought to n stato of grace 
by contact with hu old Indy whose 
home she has previously burgled. 
.How can a play wlrfi 
ko this avoid : se 


Dorothy, u character based closely 
on the writer's .own mother, on the 
.ball at 80, healthily sceptical about 
uvdrvonri'ft unnarfintlv liotid in iim- 


ii 


gicd, 

a plot-line 
sentimentality and 


everyone's apparently good 
tions .towards, her,' while open in 


iliiy 

offer. young and older adults nfumi 
. thought-provoking 
•■■.Me couple of hou 


wholly, crcdi- 
hours? Berta Freisladi 



honest dealings with them' as a think 
irig adult. The script is only wauk in 
those ' som.ewlml propagandist suc- 
tions featuring the liberal tqncher, 
marked down ns u failure when she 
soppily and unaccountably , marries 

■ ,J ' - ’ - -■ • - -*■ -. f th U j 

socle- 
and 


theatre 


Royal, Stratford East. ... 

£ Margery _ Whftlifert gives a most 


Theatre delight,' an? high ly Recommended for 
sixth formers 


J'sufitle ^performance ns ; the elderly 


fifth and 
adults. 


play ; 
mende 
well as 

1 ’ ’ 

Pam Schweitzer 


J',M4 


, Aiming this week’s contributors: 

BrUi\ AJdwraoo Is children^ bpoks Juliet Gardiner is editor pf History 
editor d£*.77ie , times .•> ;• Today ' m • 

Jo)in.Bowen |g- fhb author of -many'- -*i >*♦ \? **:•. : ' • * ? ; : . ‘ 




: ,,v . ACADEMY 3 > k ,• - 

f«7 Oxford Wt w esio j 


• V f 'NOW SHQWINQV: V 1 ' 

: , t . The (^ftlaqdlng preftch IHni ol Alain Foumfer'a classic raft# ; 

; b;i GRAND MEAULNES jA) I 

i ^^:^^;t-- v: bTWE ; :WAI>iDEREPl’' • > V v 

Tftnes Sftocqjkmfll .Supplement . 




- 

Lingo 


Quick, dear reader, off (he top of 


your head - what is a confusihle, and lj m **\ , ,.! lu * 11 m,| ‘ I* 

what is n distinguishable? You don't diflerence between ; 

Innw? Wi»ll vtiiclv tlm fnllnu'ilin: 0011 . VI VOM SVaHt tu Kl 


know? Well, study the following: 
“Confusiblcs are words that not 
only have a semantic link hut also 
look alike, sound alike, and arc 
even spelled similarly. Distinguish- 
ablcs nave an association in mean- 
ing only.” 

Clot (hat ? Right. Now get ready, 
because f nm going to ask you 
another quick question. On your 
marks, get set - arc hippopotamuses 
and rhinoceroses confusiblcs or dis- 
linguishablcs? You don't know? 
Good I 

There has recently been published a 
book: Room's Dictionary of Disling- 
ulshables, by Adrian Room*. It is a 
companion to Room's Dictionary of 
Confiaibtes , which enme out a cou- 

K le of years ago. I think it is n bad 
□ok, and I'll explain why. 

It takes pairs of words like toad/ 
frog, trios like herring/blnatcr/kinpcr, 
quartets like ganrc/set/match/rubner, 
etc., and attempts to explain their 
differences. The general idea is 
sound, and there are of course dic- 


tionaries of sy i a my ms re.nlilv avail 
able Ibis honk. d.nmiue to hi* ,i 
dictionary, has mil) 132 pages, is 
only three eights of an inch* thick 
without ils hard covers, and is based 
on (his terribly narrow idea that the 
typical seeker .liter knowledge in- 
stantly knows the difference between 
:i cmifiisjblc and a distinguishable, 
and so knows which of Mr Room’s 
two books to teach for. Well, that is 
just mu true. 

The book might qu.ilifv, if it was 
complete within its own tut tow 
will tell yon 
a toad ail'd a 
tu. it yon want to know thm. It 
will also loll you the difference be- 
tween a hare ami a rabbit. However, 
having just re-read Crct vet's fable 
about the dromedary who went to it 
lecture, I looked up camel and 
dromedary, but found nothing 

fncidciiinlly. the harc/rabhit entry 
begins: "Hoth animals are member's 
of the same (utility.'' This is less than 
literate, because "both" is super- 
fluous. 

There is also a Clerihew/ Limerick 
entry, which exemplifies the hook's 
artificiality. One can imagine some- 
body looking up the definition of u 
Clerihew, and somebody looking up 
the definition of a Limerick. It’s Tiaru 
to imagine anybody looking up the 
difference: especially somebody clev- 
er enough to know the difference 
between u confusihle and a disting- 
uishable. 

This is a book looking for a niche 
that doesn't exist. 

W. S. Brownlie 

'Rnutledge anti Kegiui Paul i'J.V.5. 


Moving art 


I hc Sculptures of Degas! ~ 
Plymouth City Museum and An (hi 

lorv mill Inn., ua ‘- 


: • v / ana ah flat 

t-ry until June 12; Castle MuS 
No, wieli June 22-July 18; Hun2 
Museum and Art Gallery, qC 
August 5 -September 4. 


Degas s work in thrcc-dlmensioiB h 
closer to our own sensibilities dm 
SB contemporary, Rodin. 

W here he exploited gesture and m- 
eulatiirv as expressions o( 
Romantic soul, Degas’s figures >f. 
lually rediscover the lost unity of 
classical art; more a state of Wm 
than a state of mind. % 

Denying any inspiration or spog. 
taneity he was ndament in his convit 
ti"n that, "Nothing in art should 
appear accidental, not even mow- 
mem". Rut however ereat his kno». 
ledge and self-discipline they dou 
do not explain the fluid succession of 
changing views revenled in "Damn 
hastening The String of Her Tights' 
or “Dancer Looking at The Sole of 
Her Right Foot". 

Volume, surface and silhouette are 
so combined that they suggest move- 
ment in the process of causing us to 
walk around the pieces; a translation 
of the temporal into the spatial that 
is the mark of a born sculptor. It is a 
rure quality and has to be seen in the 
riamu. Anyone within a hundred 
miles of this exhibition should go and 
sec it. 


MC 


High summer 


Royal Academy Rummer Exhibition. 
Royal Academy until August 15. 


In (ho old days when thu Royal 
Academy Summer Show lmd pictures 
[lacked right up to the ceiling, get- 
ting your work hung ‘‘on the lino" 
was vital, for without this eye-level 
view the chances were that your 
piece would not be noticed at all. 
This year the works have once again 
climbed up the walls but now the 
breathing spaces ore more generous, 
and in ono cuse at Icuat the pnintcr 


in fact, look just us well up high, and 
the fact that abstraction is now far 
from unwelcome ut Burlington 
House might have Influenced the de- 
cision to go up once more. For 
works of u different kind, however, 
it is as disastrous us ever - particular- 
ly in the Small South Room where 
the pieturcs are so small, and hung 
so high up thnt they arc reduced to 
tho pictorial equivalent of books hy 
the mile. 

With. over 5,000 artists submitting 


works in three-dimensions but pend, 
charcoal and paint. 

But what the Summer Show net* 


much more than sculpture is disoi- 
In the old days when 


mination — 

academic prejudice prevailed, even 
the overcrowding could not conceal [be 
fact that values of a kind were befog 
upheld. Today, having hslf-heartwjy 
succumbed to change, die RA is totally 
adrift. 


has the entire expanse to himself. 
In Gallery IV, Philip 


Sutton's 

sumptuous spreads of Australian 
seascape sour up above the mure 
abstract but cquolly richly coloured 
Ictures of John Edwards and Sandra 
low. Next door cunvuses hung three 
or four tall, but here it is Donnid 
Hamilton Fraser’s predictable brand 
of the pretty picturesque thnt domin- 
ates in quantity, whilst quality is left 
to Brian Fielding's elegant explora- 
tions of Abstract Expressionist ges- 
ture and spnllul ambiguity. Pictures 
as big, bold and broad as those do, 


more than 12, IKK) works, the 
undoubtedly hux u problem, but the 
1,51X1 items exhibited arc still fur loo 
many. Tho range is so great mid the 
quality so variable that nobody can 
make sense of this motley array. 
And for all it. 1 ! size the show is cer- 
tainly not representative, not even in 
the traditional media. 

Sir Hugh Caisson's liberalizing in- 
fluence has attracted ever younger 
and inure modern painters like Gurry 
Wrngg, but despite the presence of 
Hdouurdn Paolozzi on tnc selection 
committee, thu sculpture Is almost 
entirely provincial. If it were not for 
Michael Kenny's six "Angela" pro- 
jects there would not be even this 
whiff of what has been going on over 
the lust few yours, for these are not 


While the irony’s hot 


Strike. 

Granada Television. 


writer, Uniesluw Sulik, concluded, 
was to dramatize it. The project was 
endorsed by Solidarity , members, 
many of whom provided their own 


It took 17 days to create Solidarity - personal accounts. 

17 heady confused days. Meanwhile, Much might have gone wrong bc- 


the western world held Us breath, as 
it continued to do until martial law 
stamped out Solidarity's light. Or did 
it? jRecent • events wouia have 


, !n th£ South, 


put 


'oland/pn the front page If there 
hadn’t Mot'tngt 'dan 


fed her-:. 

Uamle. U was 


tween here and the screen - but the 
commitment (o making a film of re- 
cof d permeates the finished work . 
The day-to-day . account uncovers 
Much previously unknown of un- 
clear.-. T ; 

The special Polish flavour comes 


tfipely, - therefore, to . have anothor through the English dialogue, in the 
Mondpy t 0 6ee Granada’s importance 'attached to 1 the erection 


chance; last , ,, . ... 

Strike,, originally shown Unscheduled, 
almost Unfinished; when thfe .military 
took qver. ; < 

Strike is‘ that most sus 


of a monument to the Workers who 
had died in 1970; in the; signIScance 
. of Mass being said on worker-occu- 
pect ofi pied soil (more than' just an indica- 
f * p; a rev tion of whose .side the Church was 
); in- . the inspiratldn . given to the 
ikOfs hy Chopin and Oginski (an 


fprms, a "dramadocumentaiy . 

ODnstructiop of tho sWpyaro occupaf op); fn the inspiration given to the 
tldnm Gdansk. ift August I98d. Vet; * - r - 


jt ’ ‘ ^rhaps < more eighteenth century Polish noble com* 

powerftOly . ^ ncd^doveiopments have poser); and in the carnival air of this 

sinless and unreal: time 


ie unexpected, bopus of pofr 


. , die* 
tapes, discussions hav 
throughout, together 
fljm. .and p* ‘ 
keeping ;on. 


traying the .eyehts in English is that it 
disturbs . about the En- 


madd. R ndt a celebration but gn 
encapsulation of an event stiff with 
ifony.. ... / ; ; . 

.While there were (hany, hpiua.of 

g been taped 

wth amateur; emment Wltii ad English face. lire- 
, ... ,(,tnis :re«)cd- ' ;mtads us. that as - well ns people., of 
e ^orkws'. pari reflect- great cqurage, everyr$qcSety indi|c|es 
- ;o --- .-:~!.P rc «nt polish sense of (hose prepared' tp haVe a toot on any' 
histofy); the only - way - Wuk this-, ladder ■ ■ • r ’.- ! * l 

inattuffeil^lje. WMheadS St , • Sue Lcrmoit 


gllsh ,] character. Wo 'ice cor rupt ao v- 
“ itflli 







mm 


tttUlth TovrUi AuUiocUy 
douljlB Awmd Wlnnorl 

28-34, TOOLEYSr 
LONDON 6Et. 01-403 0608 
A vn«l axhlbltlon of medieval 
history i showing suparstlllons, 
wliohorslt, dtseass, torturo ana 
punishment. Hlilorlosllir icqutm 
and very thought provoking. 

"A delellad and serious look i Jt , 
tho horrors ol Murder end Ipfj* 
■6 realistically illustrated, they 
Improee far more than any 
ol more objects could ever dj. • 
Times Educational Supplant 
• 1 

Workshasls, Calf.Sand*^ 
Room, Easy Parking. 

Ring or wrllo lorSchool,^ 
DotnHn/Dlacounla. Allow Oban”* 

hours lor you/ visit- • — 

O lonoon amno* / 

txmmodM 






3SSSSSSSSS*' 


tli» avea of eniiw carry*** 

Nc^astilhadiYMnw^ 0 " 
irfltasrtlattrarrfrtfttajods^" j . 
pholOgraplialhsi dlailll 


«ndorB*nteitiorw.AppWW. 




Michael Clarke 


THE times EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5,32 




29 


Bibliography rules 

Brian Alderson 


Eager to aid the boom in eighteenth 
century studies, some academics at 

tr arrVMnnantori 


?87K E ?’ Mary Jane 1753 - 
Adventures/823 


tmg tne catalogues ui me onusn 
Library and the libraries at Oxford 
and Cambridge and feeding the bits 
into their computer. He in his clerkly 
way has systematized everything into 
one alphabetic sequence, occupying 
five volumes and published by Daw- 
son & Co. as Eighteenth Century 
British Books. If you want a set ft 
will cost you £1 ,250. 

Now that seems to me to be u high 
price to pay for excerpts from other 
people’s catalogues and it needs to 1 
be carefully justified to the book's 
users, whom the editors see as being 
"those engaged in historical re- 
search". Naturally such a broad con- 
gregation will not be expecting nar- 
row sectarian interests to be fully 
catered for in such a general work; 
nevertheless, they will need assur- 
ance that, within its limits, the cata- 
logue is an accurate, complete and 
helpful guide to the collections that it 
summarizes. 


fl7»J ’ U -” 88 » *U- 
ADVENTURES *l 


Inside info 


Britain I9B2 i An Official Handbook, 
tailed by ihe Central Office of 
Wormatlon, 

HMSO £12.00. 0 11 701024 .1. 


Iftj^sycuvcrod prospectus, 
UKLtd primarily for over- 
distribution, runs lu somu 380 
PJW of goods and services available 
glhe discriminating. The 33rd edi- 
SJVhc first time provides a 
history of each of the four 
wmponenl countries of the UK as 
2“> ft* Qf the various Bank and 
holidays, hidden in an uppen- 
.gjjph.wt.to set up a business 


WjtHn'a. . 

ThoTnt 


rtiZ« ntr ^ RC / es °I Westminster are 
^Kwered, including a section spe- 
«y outlining present Govern- 
S e cies in each area. This is 
SSPLv. Bn wiptessive list of 
fe , evemen,s I”* 01 informa- 
TedJ, i no OWs Is Information 
Vl to cloning oil 
wo producing false .tectji for 


• Br * tU> compendium is not 
J L n ,? ulrnl - National pre- 
aVM 2 M-?. n , the „ yocational/academic 
f '^S»W lci,ly projected; two 
devoted to training in 
: mention of appren- 

' Siffiif® • • ^P r journalists re- 

prea nf L? P a B c , section on Ihe 
ofdaSj^ 56 there is no mention 

.ySPlOst Ihrm'mk i.'-j.J.sj.i 


& ft ^-i" d H s, . ri41 ac,ion ' 


overseas there are no 
depwtmcnia or orga- 
raeniioned, although pre- 
P°°Ple will come 
V h wrt ffle L tn the British 
tto. h°ld companion 
HMSO giving such 


.JJj first el °ment here is the an- 
h kUHSJ’ / w ^? ls glven wtanever 
referen^J'”^ a PP ro priate cross- 
references to or from pseudonymous 

22? Sf the ‘‘ties of anonymous 
ones). This mode of double or trinle 

entry is much celebrated by the 

y° u need to be careful. In 
the above instance they have got the 

K P T0D |,r f0 / the book* is by 
*** n °nethe- 
less rarrectly designated in the two 
preceding entries). 

The second element is the dale. 

be wa yward. Mary 
Jane KiJner is correctly given the 
birth date for Mary Ann (whose en 

tries hove nn hirfk I..- . 


that occur 
wthin this element are an important 
P®rt of the work, and the editors 
urge usen to consult all ofVew to 
^ E£? B et tirig eveiy detail (Lyric- 

SuStfj 11 1 ? l00ked a P undar 
h k fld ^ gs i: 1,1 the cas e of our 
winer book the system has failed 

ferTS b n aU M’ althou 8 h tar sis- 
ter-in-law Dorothy has a correct 

cross-reference to her pseudonym 


ireference books 




> - *■ 


•Mai u . ,1CI P^uaoii 
nwi ’ Mar L^ nn leek* that to the 
peudonym ^S.S.", with the re 






. . r ruui iwnuse cn* 

tnes have no birth date at all); but 

Um If IE nn« I. — J-«_ _r . 


Doubts will be occasioned at once 
Ifaerefore by the claim made in its 
prospectus that it has been compiled 
£ wiln the principle of historical use- 
fulness in mind, rather than the strict 
rules of bibliography". What does 
this mean? Does it mean simply that 
detailed technical descriptions of (he 
books have been avoided (an entirely 
understandable procedure, just as is 
ibe editors' generalized application 
of standard terms of format)? Or 
does it mean that no special scrutiny 
hu been made of the entries before 
they were fed into the computer? 
'The principle of historical useful- 
ness" sounds very well, but it is not 
(like “the strict rules of bibliogra- 
phy") an altogether precise formula 
for making a catalogue, und those 
research workers who are tliinking'of 
buying Eighteenth Century British 
may want to know what this 
usefulness is. Let us therefore take a 
utilitarian Iqok at one entry from the 
catalogue and sea whether we get 
our money’s worth: 


w i hy is D0 ,i S er ta 1 ® of death (1831) 
a Tki^L 11 ? ea *y enough to And. 

ine third element Is a sequence 
number, of mechanical and not his- 
torical interest. 

Ihe fourth element is the abbrevi- 
ated title, whose violent abridgment 
usually includes enough nouns for 
the books to be recognized. In this 
case, the book being anonymous, it 
is necessary to use the later cross- 
reference to ADVENTURES where 
the additional word “Pincushion" 
sheds instant illumination. 

The fifth element is a three-figure 
Dewey decimal classification number, 
which here shows that we are dealing 
with a work of English fiction. No 
finer discrimination is possible, to 
show, for instance that “Adventures" 
is a children’s book, and although 
provision is made for alternative clas- 
sification this may well have been 
J — u rk. 


r—~ r. v *“‘““1 «iu luxa- 
tion. Places of publication other than 
London are added - but not at every 


uvi.uuu u.b iiuucu — uui uui ai cveiy 

duplicate entry. Thus only when you 
turn to ADVENTURES do you find 


•Man iv nwTi-niuwtig uu jruu I11KU 

that the 1788 dated edition of the 
above book is published in Worces- 
ter, Massachusetts. 


Glueing up 


A-7. Guide to Cteanlng and Renovat- 
ing Antiques. By Tom Rowland. 
Constable £5.95. 0 09 463630 0. 

Ihe Observer's Rook of Vlctorlana. 
By Geoffrey Palmer and Noel Lloyd. 
Warne £1,95. 


/nrne 


0 7232 1620 7 


Of these two neat little books, the 
A-Z Guide has greutcr appeal. It 
tells in clear detail how to look after 
items ns esoteric as chain mail and as 
common os mirrors. It explains 
where to get the necessary glues, 
polishes and tools. But better than 
that, it has the nerve to tell you what 
you really cannot do.. 

The point nt which the amateur 
renovator must defer to the profes- 
sional is difficult to decide on, and 
sometimes Mr Rowland may be opti- 
mistic about the skills of his readers. 
To take two crafts at random - re 


upholstering and veneering - a more 
cautious author might well have 

• ■ ■ 2__ llitfi 


, sug- 
gested giving in sooner. Mistakes, 
after all, can oe expensive. However, 
on solid information few guides are 
easier to follow or more attractive. 

Victoriana has suffered the misfor- 
tune of having been recently fashion- 
able which has resulted not only in 
massive publishing but also in a great 
many people becoming bored witn It. 
TTie amateur collector, for whom 
presumably the Observer s Book is 
Intended, would . probably find the 
information he or she seeks much 
more accessible in a larger form. 

If this little book had been in- 
tended for the collector, it might 
have been better laid out as, a dic- 
tionary, with simple explanations and 
illustrations. But it sets out to cover 
architecture, craft and painting too, 
and for this the formal is inadequate. 


L "' J ' • w “** me result 
that at least two of her books are not 
asnpned to her at all, 

•fc«* t0, !Li?™.5 1 !P li be deduced 

t & wb fe ^ghteenth Century British 
tfooAy offers much information to its 
users, it does so in a way which is 
cumbersome and unreliable, and 
which prompts the thought that 

5h 6 f 5a ■ a , nd fifl y pounds 
worth of historical usefulness" may 
oe better served by “the strict rules 
R*. bibliography" than the editors 
think. But then the more one ex- 
amines the background to this col- 
ossal enterprise the more misguided 
it seems to be. In purely utilitarian 
terms it is not quite as revolutionary 
as it seems, since - for a mere £7QG - 
historical researchers can already buy 

the Readex Microprint edition of the 

... . - ■[]-[ 




— . ......vuiiiu cumuli ui ine 

whole of the British Museum Cata- 
logue to 1975 (with full, not abbrevi- 
ated entries), so that £1,250 is an 
expensive way of finding out addi- 
tional books at Oxford and 


bridee. 

Most misguided of all though is 
the fact of the catalogue's publication 


done by guesswork. - • 

The sixth element shows the dates, 
given or conjectural, of all the edi- 
tions held in the contributing librar- 
ies, plus probable format and loca- 

finn Planne nf nnkli'itn*:^ sl.. 


m , pMUlIbpUUII 

at a time when a comprehensive 
short-title catalogue of eighteenth 
century English books is already 
being undertaken on a far larger 
scale than this one and based upon 
■» *ta books themselves. 
For although our Novocastrian scho- 
lars say, disingenuously, that their 
catalogue “will be the fullest listing 
ui print" they know foil well that a 
power-house within the British Lib- 
rary is already preparing a majestic 

list riramirtn hma h IT a 


- - j r - r ™.u 6 » umivativ 

list, drawuig.upon an immense hoard 
of materials In libraries from Los 


. — — — ■ MUlHUVd UVIU MJJ 

Angeles to Gettingen. The first mic- 
rofiches of this work should appear 
in 1982, but enough has already been 
wntten about its methods for us to 
know that it will accord' with (he 


traditional standard of bibliographic- 
lolarsmp, not 


al - and historical - scholars!.,., — 
the least of which Is that you ex- 
amine the evidence before passing it 
on to your computer. 


Frances Farrer 


Self service 


The Handbook of Tennis. By Paul) 
Douglas. 

Pelham Books £10.95. 0 7207 1383 8. 
The Observer's Book of Tennis. By j 
Clarence Jones, 

Frederick Wame £1.95. 0 7232 1599 1 


Compiled by one of Britain's leading 
professional Coaches. The Handbook 
of Tennis is b step-by-step guide to 
tne technical mastery of all the major 
strokes La the game. Each stroke is 
analysed in detail, and then'broken 
down by means of clear diagrams 
which demonstrate proper position- 
ing of body and feet, gnp and racket 
face. Many colour photographs iUus- 
in 


irate the world’s leading pisvers i 
\ oi stroke and 


fiction, their execution 
personal idiosyncrasies of- style. A 
thorough examination of strategy in 
singles tun j doubles play demon- 
strates the range of court tactics and 
shows the player how to adapt his 

B to the style of Mb opponent. 

y the author considers the im- 
portance of the right mental attitude 
toward success in the gsime. This 
clear and authoritative manual 
should prove Immensely useful to 
those wishing to . improve their game. 

Addressing itself to ' the more 
general wader, The Observer's Book 
of Tennis is a compact volume mat 
contains a good deal of information 
about ' many, aspects of Ihe _game, 
including its history ra Britain and 
abroad, the majdr tournaments 
around the world, and the many col- 
ourful personalities which have in the 
past inspired so much interest jnd 
emotion. A good round introduction 
to the history and- practice of the 
game. 

1 PeDiiy Turnballl 




‘Tally Abbey", from South Weal Wales 

Historic stability 


®®tab-West Wales. By Vyvyan Rees. 
2.95. 0 571 11820 8. Devon. By Ann 


Cam- 


«"<* Roger" Mayne. £2.95. 
11818 6. Essex. £2.95. 11819 


c°^!» ,b82i 6. By Norman 

Scarfe. Norfolk. By WUhelmine Har- 
rod. £6.95. 18057 4. 

Faber Shell Guides. 


This difference cannot last much 
longer, so let us enjoy it while we 
can. This remark, relating to the 
character of Norfolk, may be equally 
applicable to the other counties de- 
scribed iu these guides, some of 
which now appear in pnperback form 
for the first tune. The arrangement is 
unchanged - a detailed geographical, 
historical and architectural introduc- 


h*v«uivw«»ucii imsvuui/' 

tion, a gazetteer linked to a map of 

ofu 


— 1 — hiibvm iv n 111 a u UI 

the area, a full index, and profuse 
illustrations, perhaps a shade too 
dark, carefully placed to be near 
their subjects in the gazetteer. Each 
author is an extremely knowledge- 
able enthusiast, and to travol in such 
company is a delight, especially if, 
with Norman Scarfe, we leave "the 
Idiots' procession of can and Luxury 
Coaches, and go on toot". ' 

Not only do the entries describe 

1 A mnwinrinnal miM« lvu.li fi. 


connexions. While in Pembrokeshire 
(now part of Dyfcd) much perhaps 
remains os it wns when two pilgrim- 
ages to St David’s equalled one to 
Rome, m Carmarthenshire (the other 

g art of what is now called Dyfed) the 
econd Industrial Revolution has 
produced a steel plant nt Llanelli 
with a half mile long rolling bay. 
Entries praising Basildon and Harlow 
will show that there is more to Essex 
than Mucking and Messing, or the 
mud at Southend from which Mrs 
John. Knightly (Emma 1816) "never 
found the least inconvenience". The 
wide skies of East Anglia still cover 
the aptly named Great and Little 
Snqrings, and many another place 
unchanged since Domesdav Book, 
yet the cottage that Constable 
bought in 1802 at East Berghoit is 
now part of a petrol station. There 
are many excellent and detailed 
accounts of the principal towns of 
the areas, ^but^ particular mention 


the conventional guide book items - 
:at Hou: 


1 v«. J.UILVUID 1 IUCIIUI 

may be made of the fascinating pi 
lure of Plymouth, from its Hoe 
domestic and sublime" dominated 
by its seventeenth century Citadel, 
and its Naval yards, to the 1962 Civic 
Centre, dominating in its turn the 

Wnnlfl Af PfltanruilK Umti m-ll fa 8 


louses and monu- 


churches, gres 
I moots - but their very personal, 
1 sometimes gosSipy, style tells us of 
social change, of literary and artistic 


1 1 . « **■ turn l ME 

whole of Plymouth. How well it typi- 

tne 


Jics die evolution, as well as ,„ c 
historic stability, revealed in this 
splendid series of guides. 


Eric Church 


English 


bjr J. P. & W. Gallon “ 

E.J. Arnold announce an exciting two-book course for 
14-16 year dds which is ideal for C.S.E. and other 16+ 
examination assessment. Both the content and the. 

attractive presentation of text and Illustrations are 
particularly suited to older pupils. 

Book One topics range from sport and travel to out- 
of-school jobs, science and crime. The treatment of each 
topic enables pupils to Increase their written and orai skills 
and a wide selection of literature is presented for both 
• study and entertainment. 

Book Two contains Items of particular Interest tp ’ 
school leavers- work, training, leisure, hire purchase, 
personal relationships - each unit providing pupils with an 
extremely useful insight Into the adult world as well as a 
solid framework for further extension of their language 
skUls.. The books may be used In sequence or teachers may 
choose topics from elther botok^juit their pupils’ needs. 

For inspection copies of the 
English About You course, 
please write to us at the 
address below -yoLr letter 
needs no stamp if posted fin 
the UK. 


1 *’ ■ 


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tfr 






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* -• -’y 

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I : t 




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■m 


*• d 


■ttisW! 

. : aj 

ism 


LE 


E.J. ARNOLD & SON LTD,. _ 
FREEPOST, BUTTEftLEY STREET 
jL LEEDS LSI0 3TS. 

jWh 



Engli^t 

Aix>ut Vju 


iOld PUBLISHING. 


: . ; , v :i,!ii.i-.l;i f< i.i.i 

' 


i. .j ;{; 4 « *•. *i><, 1 : 











reference books: 

History ABC 


A Dictionary of British History. 
Edited by J P Kenyon. 

Seeker and Warburg £10.00. 

If one were to settle down to write u 
history of the British Isles ami its 
overseas possessions from the Ro- 
man Empire until 1970 and one were 
constrained to do this in slightly less 
than four hundred pages, including 


-Li. 


maps and charts and tables, then une 
would have set oneself a formidable 
task of organization and selection. 
Should the subject be treated chro- 
nologically? Should it he thematic? 
How to balance the broad sweep of 
events with the Tine brushstrokes of 
detail? 

J P Kenyon has solved this par- 
ticular conundrum by writing his his- 
tory as a dictionary. He neatly solves 
all these dilemmas - in a sense. His 
organizing principle is the ulphabct: 
the selection is aft you would want to 
know if you were reading other his- 
tory books and their writers pre- 
sumed you knew what “manumis- 
sion" meant, were conversant with 
the Act in Restraint of Appeals 
(1533). quite understood a throw 
away reference to “housecarle" and 
were able to recall, unaided, that 
Rhodri Mawr was King of Gwynedd 
Powyss and Seisyllwg as a result of 
an unusually propitious marriage 
alliance. 

It is, without doubt, an extremely 


good historical dictionary. In addi- 
tion to the 3,(N)0-odd entries which 
“encompass domestic, political and 
social events, foreign affairs and 
major cultural and scientific develop- 
ments. together with the men or women 
who have influenced or been influ- 
enced by the multifarious events that 
make up u country's history," there 
are also some useful maps along (he 
lines of “The British Empire in 
1920,” “India on the Eve of mutiny 
in 1858" and “Danish Invasions of 
Anglo-Saxon England." There is also 
a satisfactory genealogy of British 
monarchs and a space filling chro- 
nology. 

Some of the entries arc a bit du- 
bious - it is hard to imagine anyone 
looking up "Industrial Rev* i hi lion" in 
a dictionary, although they would be 
rewarded with a masterly summary if 
they did. Equally one can only 
admire the restraint of one of our j 
leading Stuart historians who restricts 1 
himself to less than two columns on 
the Civil War, three on Charles I 
and one on Charles II - plus exten- 
sive cross references. 

It is essentially a dictionary cast in 
the mainstream of British history, 
straightforward, empirical, accurate - 
and with a curiously dated air. A 
book to be reached for occasionally 
perhaps - after reading history hooks 
with the links Left in. 


Juliet Gardiner 


End of the line 




ala - A} I • 

illii m 

' la?'- lit *•*’ 

J ' T%: ‘ 


Where to Flsb 1982-83. D A Orton 
Adam and Chnrles Black £7.95. 

0 7136 2180 X. 

Pocket Guide to Saltwater Fishing. 
By Michael Prichard. 

Collins £2.95. 0 00 411646 l. 

Pocket Guide to Freshwater Fishing. 
By Michael Prichard. 

Collins £2.95, 0 00 411645 3. 

Fish. Edited by AHwn Copland, 
Blandford Press 95p. 0 71 j7 1207 4. 

Here ore four guides published just 
Irt : time for the summer holidays, 
meant to assist (ho novice angler or 
. flic experienced fisherman trying out 
unfamiliar waters. One (ells you 
wU$r$ to go mid whal you might 
catch,' two Toll you whut to do when 
you get there, and the other tells you 
what you've in fact cuught. 

Where To Fish 19*2-1983, gives 
tip-lo-dntc information regarding re- 
gional licenses nnd seasons, and local 
fncklslsts and' angling societies which' 


ly useful by indicating the quality of 
fishing a particular spot has to offer. 
Each ot Michael Prichard's pocket 

S uides begin with a general descrip- 
on of the respective tackle and 
techniques involved (knots are kept 
to a minimum), und an overview of 
the problems encountered tackling 
cadi fishing environment. He then 
lakes each species common to Bel-, 
tnin, and details the special tricks 
necessary for success (the section on 
trout fishing is particularly fine). Mr 
Prichard's style is casual and in- 
formative, ond the glossary at the 
end of each book helps you to sound 
knowledgeable In the local nt the ond 
of the dny. 

Although Michuel Prichard’s 
bopks include descriptions and col- 
our pliotbs and/or illustrations of all 
tlio fish featured, the Blandford 
mini-guide simply bv virtue of its size 
(3W x 416") would make it n useful 
addition, to the tackle box. There urc 
** species covered, and each gets a 


species 


Musical voices 


The Dictionary °f Composers. Edited 
by Charles Osborne. 

Macmillan Pnpermuc £4.95. 33.1 

32537 (I. 

A Dictionary of Early Music. By 
Jerome mid Elizabeth Roche. 

Faber Music/l-aher and Faber £6.95. 
571 11X135 X. £2.95. HX>3h H. 

Do not be put off by the title: 
Chnrles Osborne’s “dictionary" , first 
published in 1977 ond now usefully 
available in paperback, is both more 
pleasing and more substantial than 
its name implies. Compiled for those 
who do not have cosy access to full- 
length biographies, and based on the 
proposition (fiat some knowledge of 
the life can deepen an understanding 
of the work, it is invaluable for tbe 
student, the teacher, and the shrink- 
ing budgets of school and college 
librarians. 

This is no mere inventory of 
tedious, scanty or over generalized 
thumbnail sketches, but a rich por- 
trait gallery of sensibly proportioned 
essays, enlivened by tne varied char- 
acter and specialized knowledge of 
its contributors, critics, performers 
and scholars. On J S Bach, Italian 
opera, Messaien, Wagner, for inst- 
ance, there is the shrewd directness 
of editor Charles Osborne; on Scan- 
dinavia and Eastern Europe the per- 
. sonal responses of Robert Layton. 
There are Joan Chisseli's sympathetic 


oiul fluent i**>s.iys on Brahms ami 
Chopin, Maltin’ Cooper’s wise ami 
quietly elegant obscivulioiis oil the 
Wench . Herald (Iilford ami Denis 
Arnold's scholarly view of Renais- 
sance and Baroque. Richard 
Osborne’s energetic ami eclectic writ- 
ing on Mahler and 1 chaikovsky, ami 
Stephen Walsh's lucid iwemiclh-ceii- 
turv contributions. 

‘Choir iiuliviilii.il voices speak 
through a neatly edited, concise 
house style, as sharp and illuminating 
as the excellently reproduced ami 
nicely varied monochrome illustra- 
tions. From Adam to Zemlinsky (no. 
not quite, alas: it stops at NVoli) 
there can hardly be a better hook of 
its type currently available. 

llie Roches' dictionary » a dic- 
tionary. A doth bound pocketbook. 
it is a clear, terse work of rcudy- 
rcference, containing short para- 
graphs on some 7IKI composers from 
tbe troubadours to Monteverdi. Its 
brief ulso covers the explanation of 
terms, source material, hums, and 
instruments which are illustrated by 
little line drawings. With the still 
increasing exposure of prc-1650 
music in recording, broadcasting, 
literature nnd live performance, this 
compact guide, with its suggestions 
for further, more coin ore licnsive 
reading, fulfils a real need and tines 
so handsomely. 

Hilary Finch 


Movie melody 


Encyclopaedia of the Musical Film. 


Encyclopaedia or 
By Stanley Green. 
Oxford University 



Oxford University Press £12.56. 

Few reference works can huve given 
the compiler more pleasure than re- 
searching the 1 ,600-plus entries relat- 
ing to (he production of Hollywood 
musicals, composers' “bio-pics and 
the many memorable songs that have 
Braced non-musical films since Al 
Johan's famous understatement, 
back In 1927, that we “ain't heard 
nothin' yet". Though this tuncfillcd 
tome does acknowledge British con- 
tributions to the genre (Coward, The 
Beatles, and Jessla Matthews' ever- 
green shoulder arc honourably men- 
tioned), the focus is firmly on Amer- 
ica's vustly successful reworking of u 
popular art form - part-music hull, 
part-operetta - translated onto cellu- 
loid With enduring and endearing 
charms. 

Green's style is concise and crisp - 
plots nro summarized succinctly, wry 
anecdotes going behind the scenes In 
studio or lyricist's workroom to re- 
veal how ccrtnln film musicals wore 
shaped to become buffs' delights, 
what influences thoy reflected and 
what fashions they launched. (The 
Gershwins' “Nice Work if You Can 


Get It", Tor example, was evidently 
inspired by u Punch cartoon, of 
Cockney chars discussing a friend 
who “ 'ad become «' ore", (hereupon 
prompting the funtous observation of 
the songs title). A dry humour 
underscores Green's obvious enthu- 
siasm for the good, had or forge I (• 
able movies he chronicle*., avoiding 
the customary camp gush. 

His is a detailed A to Zee of n 
still-evolving modern art, as practised 
bv n variety of unique talents und 
(forgiving the curious omissions of 
Mel Brooks, Belle Midler und I lair) 
(he book- should offer mi invaluable 
basis for medin students (or funs) to 
analyse Ihc cultural Implications - of 
“Shuffling off lo Buffalo", say, or 
the geometric pmicrningH of Busby 
Berkeley's chorus-girls (copied by 
Nazi marchers): to trace (he largcly- 
Biiropcan backgrounds of many or 
America's most acclaimed writers, 
musicians und performers und unuly- 
xe the unrivalled wit and wisdom of 


1 UK I IMKS HHK-A I IDNaI. SIWUMEW 1 U „ 


Early word 

3S“ 1: ' d, " ;i " 10 " £1.50. 0 )!! 
The Oxford Children's Picture 

By *“ A * 1,111 mi Cl “ri» 

Vi'p 10 -! ,nivcrsUy Press 0 19 

Adults and children wnnt such diffe- 
rent tilings from u dictionary that h 
»s difficult to give a fan trial to the 
variety of illustrated ones now on 
offer. The new Macmillan, a stag 
on from their Colour Dictionaiy 
contains over 2000 entries, all flh£ 
(rated by examples and many by 
pictures. Among them is “sad" (de- 
riiiiiion-“unhupi)y"), with the 
example: "Cathy wus sad when hti 
best friend moved nway to another 
town." This word, picked at random, 
is already in the spoken vocabulary 
of any child old enough to use (he 
dictionary, is unambiguous and has 
an easy, phonetically regular, spell* 
ing. Why then would anyone want to 
look it up? 

An adult might want to know the 
etymology or tne history of its use. 
The rare child with the same curios- 
ity couldn't find the answers here 
anyway. And comprehensiveness is 
no argument when you are choosing 
only 2000 words to include. The re- 
viewer is left baffled by the selectioo 
criteria. 

The verbal illustrations Bre of 
several different kinds. Some are 
positively unilluminating: "The Brit- 
ish eat a lot of potatoes"; some nuz- 
zling lo at least one reader: “You 
jrnoiv taller when you are asleep." 
Some offer further definitions: “You 
hit n golf bull with a golf club"; 
others risk questions: "Is there a 
nnrul in your school grounds? ot 
"Which of these is a teapot! . These 
last examples bring the dictionary 
closer to an encyclopedia or resource 
bonk. . . 

Tlic Oxford Picture Dictionary, 
with only HtKl words, looks like • 
Giles cartoon annual In format and 
indeed its detailed pictures are pefr 
pered with visual jokes of domeHir 
disaster: the dog sleeps under (M 
kitchen table in blissful ignorance « 
the glass of milk that is nbouljo 
descend on him, the cat mates 
spaghetti junction or Oran s kwjg 
wool while her attention is ent ’ 
where. 

It's arranged a bit like a German 

Ihtdfn. I ; .ucn page has cilhcr an inte- 

gmlcd scene - « the birthday P 
tv", "nt tile zoo , or a collageu 
tficmc - "into space", "sport - 
iiuiiilicrcd pictures and ■ 
words running n semantic field, 
number labels nrc not always an 


Visitors’ books 




The Illustrated Guide to Marine Ufa. 
By Werner De Haas and Fredy 
Knorr. £8,95,: 0 287 P0Q56 6. ... 

The (11 unrated Guide toMofltiscs; j&y; 



The Illustrated Guide to MoUpkUi By: 

. Horst Jiuii* £7;45. B ,287 00055 !81 
Harold Starke ' Ltd . 

• v ,■ irii' ,* j .* j 1 ' ■ ? *; w - 

There cap., Be ho, doubt that Ui books 
dealing with "plant aqd animal life, ; 
modern colour ■ iUustr&tioris aidi afr 
otipe atiractivo and a good :&fdi to 
"identification, These two. Books, 1 ; 
hptoever, show that good line drfcw- 


gy, is fairly made. Wisely, (he older There is now a h 
scientific names of species arc given to accompany visl 
whore appropriate, although they may The Historic How 
haye been superseded in more recent millan Papermac 


There is now a large range of books 
to accompany visits to stately homes. 


ilshed : ,Sorn^.years dgo. butane 1 still | aqd more mundane matters such is 
standard fabrics find ! much fn use, i opetiingi. times, admission changes 
\ , ,Tht. Illustrated Guide to Afoiluscs* add facilities for the disabled i There 
’dealing fafibTijind and fiOShfaater spe- 1 is also- a gjopsurt of architectural 
'.fifes; pfter a brief description of 'the fcrtit and an alphabetical rlist of 
biology, of. the two classes concerned, famous .: architect^ ; gardeners, and 


those Immigrant theatrical gypsies, ““'[[."“J , p j ncc( j and the 

Like Carmen Miranda, I Yi fi Vi Yi 

like it very much, and it could be the * *L[ V relationships hut on the 

sum of mmelhing hl S . jS £"56 

Phillip Bergson 

another tiling u child would never 

Ut Perhaps the best that 
hoped from these early (heflonaw^ 

that they will not .pul chi M s “flS 
whole idea of reference hoc > • ^ 

of these are attractive enougti^, 

that modest aim. So with J 
their users will progress to 

lhln8 ns 5000 as ATrrHjj^ 3,. 

A Dictionary of Dyes and Dyeing. « 
K G Ponting. . 13 h£- 

Bell and Hyman £4.95. 


' list of clpb activities such as archaeol- 
ogy, brass rubbing und sailing. The 


second chapter contains a county-by- 
county analysis of places to visit, nnd 
the third offers ideas for . outdoor 


is also- u gjbssart ol archUectuial 
teriha and an alphabetical rlist of 


;^ves^ef ails of the .species faith keys fdrnjtare makers who have co 
to rid (oeptifibktioo , : The Ust of ofu-, ’butod rto (he .present state of 
dally accepted, names. for British land hoiides. Historic Houses, Castles 
And freshfaater fUuna published . lr\ Gardens (ABC Historic Publics 
■ ^976 D as ^bdeh ^aken : into vBccouht £J,30 or 1 £2. 30 inc.‘ postage)' cbm 
making the trqolc a valuable addition; Similar :in formation, on morfe he 



German 


and ^apt^d (rom Jljo, original . 

i" 


- Ole a valuable addition 

to the concholo gist’s library. Useful 
notes are also given about conduct 
research. - 
th the idea of beino Os 


is- lnt.endcti for all Jia) 
•i clftimi given sopift krtc 


^Iddge 




farhous - architects t : gardeners, and 
fdrnltare makers who have contri- 
buted :to the present state of the 
houses. Historic Houses, Castles and 
. Gardens (ABC Historic Publications 
£j,30 or £2.30 Inc/ poatagfi)' contains 
Similar :lnfotraation, on tnorfe houses 
hi Britairi and Ireland, but with less 
historical and architectural detail. It 
is well: Illustrated. ; 

• • Ideas for more energetic activities 
i. are offered Jn. The Young Observer 
! Action Guide (George Allen and Un- 
wjti., £5.50. 0 04 790005' 9 ( £1:95: 0 
: 04 790004’ 0) camelled bv BettV 


activities, with sections on local cus- 
toms .and . folkore. Helpful advice 
about relevant organizations is given 
throughout, the book. • 

The second edition of The Good 
Museums Guide (Macmillan Paper- 
,niBC £4.95. 0 333 32763 2) by Ken- 
neth .Hudson, is a consumer’s alma- 
nac in the Egon Roney style. Twenty 
museums were selected for highest 
commendation. . It; -has concentrated 
all its ' efforts on encouraging 
museums, sp Often run by local au- 


thorities on a shoestring, id . offer ,tm 
acceptable all-round package of good 
exhibits, good facilities and general 
comfort. Accordingly, all entries are 


’ U I -- - / — -I .mm T 1 .•» r yvpfw ^ A Mmf m* ■ X/ 

/i04 790004 -0) cc^mpfled by, Betty 
n ■ I m 9!PP* ,p 9t -Salmon, A chapter op 
ti r l^ng8 td do' , giyes an alp|ifeetia(l 


accompanied by symbols denoting 
various, amenlifes. The result is a 
lively, and ! critical assessment , of 
museums and art galleries in (he 
British Isles. " 

Caroline Wendhani 


definitions ffrid'InstruCtio^ ^ 
ears as the manager ofj 1 


tcrest devclopcd into a 

Ho is now anacknoMedged* 

and continues to edit me 


Pasold Research Fund for 
of Textile history. Dali 



THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 



31 


Children’s literature 


Realism spiked with fantasv 

Audrey Laski on the latest paperbacks * 


An exciting development in paper- 
back publishing is the appearance in 
this format of very large and beauti- 
ful books which must have been pro- 
hibitively expensive in hardback; in 
paper they are not cheap, but cer- 
tainly more attainable, and well 
enough made to stand handling. 
There are fine examples at both ends 
of the age-range. Cathedral and City 
(David Macaulay, Collins, £3.50 
each) are brilliantly illustrated 
accounts of the construction of, re- 
spectively, a medieval cathedral and 
a Roman city, ideal presents for 
prospective architects, engineers, 
historians and archaeologists, while 
for absolute beginners Brian Wild- 
smith's ABC (OUP, 2.50) will be a 
visual education, however irrelevant 
the ABC may be to the acquisition 
of literacy. 

(n this case beauty is entirely self- 

e ng. In The Princess and the 
n, (Granada, £1.25) the ele- 
gance of Ann Evans' illustrations does 
not justify the formal sentimentality 
of Marika Hanbury Tenison’s text or 
its reinforcement of sexual 
stereotypes. The heroines of The 
Eggbox Brontosaurus (Michael Den- 
ton, Illustrated by Hilda Offen, 
Oanada, 85p) and The Paper Bdg 
Princess (Robert N. Munscn, illus- 
trated by Michael Martchenko, Hip- 
po, 85p) are more spirited and cap- 
able than the heroes, and both stor- 
ies are very funny. Daggle Dogfoot 
[Dick King-Smith, illustrated by 
Mary Rayner, Puffin, 95p) has a 


pSBKSSBs 


nnd proves Unt p ig! Un fly ■ 

Wood (illustrated by William Rush- 
ton, Magnet, £1.25). To look at the 
ofTmnt 1 owin £ 1 ° flds acquisition 

tL wSS rSL $ om the vi ewpoint of 
tne Wild Wooders produces a sub- 

stantml novel with a strong though 
not simplistic political angle* the 
close-pacKed text will ImbawS 
appeal more to adults than to chit- 
aren, however, especiaUy in the 
mean print of this edition; This de- 
plorable visual quality also man en- 
joyment of The Guardian of 
(Magnet, £1.25) Monica Hughes 5 
admirable second Isis story; this is 
the novel to give to those who be- 
heve they could not like science fic- 
tion: rich in thought and feeling as 
well os sinking in action, and raising 
important questions concerning 
truth, morality and relationships. 

For adolescents wanting to think 
about these things in the context of 
ordinary life, there is Pennloaton's 
Seventeenth Sommer (K M Peyton. 
Magnet. £1.25). The life is not quite 


ordinary* perhaps, since not many 
tearaways like Pennington are gifted 
with an outstanding talent for the 
piano, and things work out perhaps 
implausibly well for him, but that 

SJJ 1 J* J}* reader's passionate 
desire. Musical talent is the gift, too, 

!h.Ji ,1 L r01ne J? f Joan Ungard's 


kstte«i.. . 1 WUU3C sane sne 

bmeriy resents her mother's new 

husband. This is a warm, earthy 

Ktnrv iMrk dra ^ i, ' ’ 


than the Peyton. A classic ofreallsm 
for rather yoimger readers is Gumble’s 
Yard (John Rowe Townsend, ilhii- 
trated by Dick Hart, Puffin, 90p); 
the tussling with cnrainals now seems 
an unnecessary addition to so splen- 
didly direct an account of children 
copmg with being abandoned, but 
this was a pioneer novel. 

For those who like realism spiked 
with fantasy there is plenty about. 
For older readers it Is the. sinister, 
from America, the intrusion of an 
Ozarks witch into domestic life in 
New Mexico, in Lois Duncan’s Sum- 
mer of Fear (Hippo, UiOO); home- 
grown, two disturbing ghost stories, 
The House on the Brink and The 
Ghost on the HU1 (John Gordon, 
Puffin Plus, each £1.00), in which the 


Ghosts (edited by Richard Davis, 
P" nada . 9Sp), testifies lo the popu- 
B. y such Stings, and so does 
Peter Davison’s Book of Allen Mons- 
ters (Sparrow, • 95p); both contain 
some good, some commonplace and 
some simply nasty stories. There is 
much more benign magic in two stor- 
Jes for ycunger readers, WlUlam the 
Wfanrd (Patricia Cleveland-Peck, 
illustrated by Sophie Kittredge, 
Beaver, 85p), whose young hero be- 
comes an apprentice neignbourhood 
hke a magical district nurse, 
and The Box In the Attic (illustrated 
by Lynette Hemmant , Carousel, 
95p), a Nesbil-like mixture of family 
ufe and fairy-tale which shows that 
Barbara Euphan Todd in no way 
exhausted her power in inventing 
Worzel Gummidge, 6 

Vlad the Drac (Ann Jungman, 
illustrated by George Thompson, 
Granada Dragon, 85p) begins well 
with Judy and Paul finding a baby 
vampire, who can't stand the sight of 
blocKl, on a trip to the Carpathians, 
but does not do enough with the 
original inspiration. More milage is 
got from the problems of concealing 
and feeding a forbidden pet lizard in 
Wally (Jucfie Wolkoff, Hippo, 70p)" 
and under the fun there is a touching 
sense of two brothers developing a 
sense of solidarity. A more overt use 
of pet-kccping as a lesson in life is 
central to Tod’s Owl (Richard Potts, 
illustrated by Maureen Badley, 
Knight, 95p); early in the book Tod’* 
grandfather dies and the story is as 
much about coping with bereavement 
as about taming an owlet. Death 


books 


addicts, they are piobabJy all alike, 
but comparison of three basically 
similar stories shows how great the 
range of quality is: Sabotage af 
Slablewaw (Judith Berrisford, 


1. , r/ vMaiiiwu-iiM dilU 

agreeable, but K M Peyton, again, in 
Tne Team (Sparrow, 95pj shows 
mem a clean pair of heels; this pony 
book is a novel. Everything a good 
writer touches turns to gold; Rose- 
ra&ry Sutcllff, writing tor a younger 
readership than usual, produces two 
shon tales with all the clarity, 
humanity and heroic grandeur her 
older readers expect (Eagle's Ere 
and A Circlet or Oak Leaves, illii? 
(rated by Victor Ambrus, Beaver 
each 80p.) 

From Jong ago to far away: JaHa 
and Jafta - My Mother are little 
picture books about an African child 
and his world (Hugh Lewin and Lisa 
Kopper, Dinosaur, 85p each). For 
the same BRe-group. Mrs Gaddy and. 
the Ghost (Wilson Gnye and Marilyn 
Hafner, Hippo, £1.25) is an engaging 
tale about coexistence. 

Two books of poems: Songs for 
my Dog (Max Fatcnan, Illustrated by 
Michael Atchison, Puffin, 80p) is fun 


Two books of poems: Songs for 
my Dog (Max Fatcnan, Illustrated by 
Michael Atchison, Puffin, SOp) is fun 
of a minor sort; Strictly Private 
(edited by Roger McGoueh, illus- 
1 rated by Graham Dean, PuTfin Plus, 
£1.25) is for older readers, nnd dar- 


Mr Gordon really needs his touches 
of the macabre. But yet another col- 
lection of ghost stories, Animal 


w - - ----- — - "“W tu ivwia will auctuv ID auuil 

much about coping with bereavement cents, one is sad for tne bleakness m 
os about taming an owlet. Death their world and proud of their sloic- 
ngures also in That Dog! (Nanette ism. To be cheered, one must turn to 
Newman, illustrated by Penny non-fiction: The Kids' Book of 
Simon, Carouse], 85p), though the Games (RudJ McToois, Beaver, 
overall tone is light and engaging. £1.50) is far superior to any other 
tne pony book, of course, is in a compilation of the sort I have seen 
special class of pet books. For and a great intelligence amplifier. 


FnrwarH intn tVm noct Diode, distillation, ductile 

iwaiu in lu LUC pdbL u - 


Tom Corfe on teaching primary history 


History In Primary Schools. A pruc- 
tka) approach for teachers of 5 - 
to U-year-old children. By Jonn E 
Bljth. 

McGraw-Hill £5.25. 0 07 08 4128 4 

"Superficial," said the HMIs in 1978 
of much primary school history. And 
sorrowfully they noted uimiossncss, 
w* of planning, fragmented 
approach. 

leachcrs whose work so dis- 
appointed them were confused and 
inghlcncd by pundits debuting the 
content of school history and proc- 
faming Its Irrelevance anyway. Jin- 
ibusiasts, with or without benefit of 
jpccialisitralnlng, might work histor- 
ical wonders, transforming whole cur- 
ncula, schools or lives in the process. 
J"! ofoors, clueless oltout history 
JJ. ■ teach it, victims of 
r '! ra n !,18 cHuos, thankfully 
^ difficult , boring, unfmnll- 
«r subject to ihc outer fringes of the 
curriculum. 

Bjyih's omlnenlly prncticni 
SSH mainly for these non- 
Sk n ts 'jfo e °" ers sound idens, 
°dvice and useful Intorma- 
gii? "fa* t0 tench, how to teach 
ih'rpp «* w f. crc i t0 ^ ncl the resources; 
■JLraf quostions for any 
Tlus is an unashamed collcc- 
Wats; recipes; and a 
S j rc ?P fls are invaluable 
and stimulus until we de- 
we our own. 

question is rather nog- 
Htoe’ iS t , e L ac h it? “Because it w 
inn usual answer, which 

•fc^uP^tely why some primary 
Klto ls ai ™ ess and boring, 
ont 5Kwic^ mm 9 nd8 selectivity with- 
SSf 5in6 .5 rinci P |es of selection; 

of s yllabuses 
otPP° rl i n 8 arguments. Now 

WAmi aiRS? n r asons putting 
if nX„ A,rTh at into any syllabus, 
K naw i ust why we 
Jfejjffi 1 particular bunch of eiglit- 
t^roJ 0 . e , ar ? “bout Norman 
oe«j,tQ w ® lack the guidance we 
'tn * “ material, decide how 
Nb. ms* J 0vc , r * and evaluate 

r 1 stories- Si know « has all the 
Sulan? m 0 ec,ivc ya™ 8 - true-life 
> • romance, epic adventure. 


tales of far-off, alien worlds, and so 
on; each an invaluable peg on which 
teaching hangs. But is our story to 
broaden the child’s experience or 
deepen his understanding, stretch his 
imagination, stimulate his creative in- 
stinct, advance his use of language or 
develop his critical thinking?- Both 
story und how it is pul over depend 
upon Ihc answer. 

Ollier emphases, omissions and 
issues rolso questions. Is the book 
more concerned with teacher’s per- 
formance than with children's learn- 
ing? Conversely, has It enough help 
for the lonelier who would keep 
ahead of his class? We have a coldlv 
clinical chart to help evaluate school- 
books, but none for adult reading; 
and (ho uninitiated need help to rec- 
ognize sound stuff, Mrs Blyth at one 
singe suggests Ladybirds as good for 


Longman Illustrated Science Diction- 
ary. By A Godmwi. 

Longman £2.95. 0 582 55645 7. 

The difficulties of providing a lay- 
man's explanation of complex scien- 
tific terms has long been recognised 
by compilers of dictionaries. Here is 
an attempt to solve the problem in a 
novel fadiioD. ... 

Definitions are not listed in one 
general alphabetical sequence. In- 
stead, physics, chemistry and biology 
are each classified in a number of 
main sections, (as instances heal, 
meteorology, magnetism, radiation 


and electronics, or organisms, ana- 
tomy, diet, skeleton, hormones and 
ecology. 

These sections are then sub-di- 
vided. To illustrate again, for 
meteorology there are pages con- 
; earned with winds, clouds, weather, 
humidity, condensation and atmos- 
phere; while diet covers enzymes, 
food movement, teeth, nutrition and 
deficiency diseases. Then, for each of 
these headings, come entries for the 
. specific words - dewpoint, diabetes, 
diode, distillation, ductile and all the 
rest. ’ 

A' major advantage of this techni- 
que is mat related words are found 


in the same area of the dictionary, 
often on the same page, while the 


cross-referencing is clear and adequ- 
ate. Thus the page on which diode 
appears also has paragraphs on valve 
and electrode, and page references 
° ,* c,ec t*°ns and so on. 

. All this, of course, requires a main 
index, and this is provided, together 
with helpful hints on how to make 
the best use of the dictionary. Illus- 
trations, in full colour, should also 
be mentioned. The whole may not 
supplant established works, but it is 
a ureful complement which could be 
particularly helpful to beginners or 
non-specialists. F . yj t KeUflway 


teacher preparation; fair enough, if 
the reader knows how to recognize 
occasional pictorial and textual how- 

• IPLI. ‘ n( rail a ml. 


lers. This raises questions of rellaml- 
tiy, truth. Does it matter If, w» the 
Interests of lively teach i he druids 
wear white nighties and Vikings hor- 
ny hclmcls, if dastardly foreigners 
outnumber our side and factory 
bosses dedicate their lives to 
exploiting children? 

On u host of similar issues active 
teachers will wish to challenge Mis 
Blyth: on the superiority of contem- 
porary pictures over careful recon- 
structions, for example, or the 
rather lowly place accorded local his- 
tory. But tnis is to demand another, 
bigger book; which might put off just 
those who must read, enjoy and use 
this one. And those readers should 
include infants teachers; for while 
some might reject in horror the no- 
tion of infants learning history, Mrs 
Blyth is at her happiest demonstrat- 
ing the possibilities of the past for 
them. Apart from spendid Btones. 
there are playthings from the past, 
places to visit where other children 
trod, family memories and memen- 
tos, dressing up and miming and 
play-acting and picture-making. Ana 
why not, I wonder, good poems like 
Horatias. vivid in my own memories 
of infant days; which shows us how 
and why Rome began7 



Everyman's 

Encyclopaedia 

Sixth Edition 

:This widely acclaimed and authoritatiye reference 
work is eminently suitable for both* home and office 
uw. It has been completely revised, re- set, 
re-illustrated and enlarged to provide instant access 
to over 51 ,000 entries through its traditional A-Z 
arrangement, with comprehensive cross-reference. 

It contains: . 

* 8 million words 

* 8,988 pages 

* 4,800 photographs 

* 1>650 line diagrams, tables and maps 

* 64-page/ full-colour atlas section 

‘ * 12 volumes, bound In green cloth with silt 
blocking; coloured endpapers and head and 
tall bands 

'Everyman's Encyclopaedia is everything a compact 
Work of reference for the home should be.' 

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Recommended.retail price £195 

Everyman's Fact Finder 

The perfect orie-volume general reference book for 
ail the family. Almost every subject under the sun is 
covered and there is a large biographical section, a 1 
full-colour atlas and a section of 'General' 
information such as abbreviations, wine vintages and 
Nobel prize winners. No home, school or office 
should be without It. 

October £8.95 • 





Everyman's 
Good Efiglish Guide 

HARRY FJELDHOUSE ; 

Controversial, wide-ranging, entertaining as well as 
informative, this up-to-date handbook has the 
answers lo most of today's sticking points In English, 
including a digest of current grammar and cavers 
spelling, punctuation, proriundatlon and style. 

27 May £7.95 

DENT 

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pi 

m 


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Jr? 



resources : = 

Invisible display 

John A Barker reviews filmstrips for biology 


Colour and Camouflage in Animals 
by Joint Fennell 
Filmstrip with notes. £0.90 
Audio*' visual Productions. Hacker 
Hill House, Chepstow. Gwent. 

This set provides n Tine ranee of 
examples of colouration and different 
vurieties of camouflage found in the 
animal kingdom. Examples of sexual 
dimorphism in colour utton arc shown 
in birds such as the Peacock and 
Paradise Sheldrake, and in un insect. 


the Banded Agrion. 

Warning colouration is exhibited 
by a number of distasteful insects, as 
with the Tiger Moih, A ref in ettfu. 


The use of sudden display patterns, 
such as eye snots, are used ny some 
insects like the Poplar Hnwkniorh, 


Smerinthus populi, to deter potential 
predators. Other insects mimic a dis- 
tasteful or harmful type - a phe- 
nomenon which is illustrated by a 
soldier fly mimicking a wasp. 

In other cases colour may provide 
a sign stimulus, as in the case of the 
red patch on the beak of a herring 
gull which elicits a pecking response 
in the gull chicks. The slick insect is 
used as an example of an animal 
using body shape and colouration for 
very effective camouflage. 

The larva of the Poplar Hawkniolh 
has body stripes that match the angle 
of the leaves arising from the poplar 
shoot. Tlie scl ends with examples of 


disruptive colouration and animals 
thill change colour. 

The overall standard of photogra- 
phy in this set is high. There arc 
some particularly interesting exam- 
ples such ns the" Paradise Sheldrake. 
rut Ion in vnrieeatn and the albino 
common frog. The concise notes pro- 
vide useful background male rial and 
this set will he use fill not only Tor a 
variety of biological topics hui poten- 
tially also in other areas, such ns art. 

Animul Classification 
Protozoa to Arthropoda. Eclii- 
nnderms nnd Vertebrates 
by Julian Cremona 
Filmstrip with notes. £6.9(1. 

Audio- Visual Productions, Mocker 
Hill Hu use, Chepstow, Gwent. 

These two filmstrips (also available 
as slides) are intended to provide 
teachers with visual material from 
which to discuss the variety of animal 
life. The range of animals within the 
limitations of size of the set is 
reasonable, nnd there is a good 
selection of the invertebrate pnyla. 
All the major phyla are illustrated, 
including Ncmntoaa. 

The second set devotes seven 
slides to cchinoderms, two to pro- 
tnchordntcs and (he rest to ver- 
tebrates. Here a cetacean would 
have been more valuable as an 



- i 


Common 
biological 
systems 

lUulogii-nl Systems ~~ ' 

Photosynthesis. Hormones. Cell Ha. 
smr.it kiii. Replication of Genetie 
Material. Uitzyiues. Biosyirtfo*. 
I lie Immune Response. 

Compiled by T. [order. 

Sets nf 12 slides with teachers’ w* 
W. HI each. ^ 

The Slide < entre Ltd, 1*13 Chatf® 
Road, London SWlI 5BR 


sari 


'■■■fcW 






WJSt 

SR 


The frog Is f ram “Echinodcrms and Vertebrates “ and the Herring Gull Earns 
argentatus from "Colour and Camouflage in Animals" 


example of an aquatic mamniol than 
the seal. 

On the whole, the animals illus- 
trate the major features important 
for classification, hut the quality of 
the photography is variable. There 
arc some very good slides but some, 
cspccinlly those of aquatic organisms. 


lack clurity. 

There is not enough colour con- 
trast in the stained microscope pre- 
parations, and the shot nf the tape- 
worm scolex does not show all tile 
essential features. Overall, this is art 
acceptable collection and (he brief 
notes provide helpful summaries. 


Steady state species I Rods, joins and bits 


Trnnsimitatlonlsm 


the steady 


slate theory of species. Interpretation 
of the fossil record. 

Audio cassette, IS colour slides, sup- 
plementary booklet. £10.50 
Audio Learning Ltd, Sard a House, 
1H3-189 Queens way, London W2 

The speakers here are Geoffrey Har- 
per, n proponent of the steady state 

-i: 

the (ape is concerned with arguments 
for and agninst the steady state 


strati graphical markers, the A E Tru- 
man theory of the evolution of oys- 
ters, phylctic gradualism versus the 
punctuated equilibrium model, and 
finally the changes of ecosystems 
during geological history. 

Tlifi tope provides a good oppor- 
tunity for students to listen to a 
.stimulating argument between two 
very articulate speakers, and if any 
of them felt that the fossil record 

all* 

, -UV, 

the end. 

The booklet provides a series of 




that all species always existed on (he 
earth, excepting those that,. In time, 
become extinct, Thus, for example, 
man and dinosaurs co-existed along 
with all present-day forms of life. 
The two speakers base tlicir views on 
various types of evidence concerned 
with the fossil record; “living fossils** ; 
dating the racket and the use of 
hierarchical classification. 

On the second side of the tape ilic 
speakers discuss their Interpretation 
of the fossil record in greater detail. 
Tonics . Include the use of fossils as 


ors’ viewpoints. Since the mcchnnism 
of evolution is once more becoming a 
topic for debate amongst professional 
biologists, this tape is -timely. 

The most obvious use Is at sixth 
form level and In tertiary education, 
but it Is essential that tne uudlenca 
has some background of evolutionary 
theory since a fair amount of know- 
ledge (s assumed. In this respect it is 
r pity that (ho chart of geological 
terms mentioned by one of the 
speakers, is not shown In the 
booklet. J.A.B. 


by William Dale 

Spaccmaster 1; a construction kit 
Ian MacLcnnan. 

Oliver & Boyd, Robert Stevenson 
House, 1-3 Baxter's Place, Leith 
Walk, Edinburgh EH1 3B0. £13 plus 
VAT. 

BBBBWBB — . 8— —‘—I 

Some people, and with good reason, 
wince at tne expression ^‘educational 
toy", But Spacemaster I gives due 
emphasis to (he toy as well ns to the 
education. It is a colourful, inge- 
nious, and almost certainly enjoyable 
construction kit, which suffers not Rt 


London for trippers 


An Invitation : to London 


Ho thrills to the lugubrious fas- 
driatiori of that mournful fortress the 


all frpm being hnsed on conscious 
thought about infant learning, and 
which conics with guidance on how 
to use It to develop concepts und 
skills in (lie first years of school, 

The pleasantly non- technical ap- 
proach is sliown In the preference for 
words such ns "bit" rather than 
"modulo", "element" or whale ver. 
Hero we have curved bits, corner 
bits, long bits and short bUs - along 
with some more elaborate shapes, 
wheels, ladders, crosses and so on; 
all made from a soft, foam-like yel- 
low and blue plastic. 

There are three methods of Joining 
these bits together using rods ana 
joins made from other materials; and 
an almost infinite number of possible 




Tape-slide pack, 60 minute tape, 55 Tower of London; he is tempted to 
colour slides. £15 say Paul’s lives and breathes like : |?£icil%licliu 

^° s JrSfPS?- I^oducrto ns , 27B Rich- n0 other building on earth; he even UMa Ull$ 111 
rnond Hill, Richmond, Surrey, TWIG finds tlie Sunday paintings along the . _ T , t ■ 

■- , Bavswoter Road appealing. by Nick Thomas 

Happy the man whose picture of enthusiasm? The pack, covering the Look 
London Is as rosy- as that of Peter worn track from changing the Guard Visual perception mated 
Qavldson. You have to' hand It- toy. to Trafalwif ' Square and Piccadilly by Wilfred Brennan, Jr 
hlfo > here is tourist guide who “ Gircps,- St 'Paul’s, 1 the . River, the and Juliet Reeve 
genuinely t feels that London, the Tower, W^st mins ter. Abbey and the Tekcbers handbook £2 
Proverbial a heart of gold,. Houses of Parliemeitt,,Usp takes in books 30p ‘ grid 35p ei 
ig an e^dUng compamdn whqse plea- sfrch 1 Colourful idorsels the Lord; stencil books.. £5.93 eat 
aares ^p be yOUrt; Mr Davidson has, Mayot’vshqw, Carnaby ■ Strett, « "- Ll - 

bj&en a tourlftt gujde for seven. yeprs Bond , lunch’ and . even ^an evening’s 
and he: still thuiM hifc subject; is Of' ehtertalnment". ' . •*.' 

Universal interest. y-"' 


end products. .Sixteen hiniiimtcil 
work curds illustrate poientiul con- 
structs from tables to helicopters, 
with the necessary components 
shown on the hack. 

It Is sensibly suggested Hurt chil- 
dren be encouraged to explore the 
kit’s possibilities in free play first. 
Only after this, and after discussion 
of the different bits, are the work 
cards to be introduced; with occa- 
sional return to free piny. 

• At this point a further piece of 
ingenuity Is Introduced: the soft plas- 
tic bits will float in wuter without 
absorbing it. However, n set of 
wushcr-lucc metal rings Is tdso pro- 
vided; and ns more of these ure 
added to the soft hits, (he construc- 
tion will sink lower nnd lower In tlie 
water, uniil it finally disappears he- 
neath the waves. 

Tills is a tremendously attractive 
kit, mvmher l of a series. The 
accompanying booklet In thorough 
nnd imaginative, and shows u re- 
freshing enjoyment und close 
observation of small children. It 
shows how. ns woll as learning about 
shape and , manipulation, rouding, 
writing, arid number skills can he 
developed through the Spaccmaster l. 


Establishing behaviour 


worn track from changing the Guard 
to Trafalgar * Square and Piccadilly 
Gircps,:- St 'Paul’s, the . River, the 
Tower, Westminster^ Abbey and the 


Houses of ParMrneitt, &LlsQ takes in 
sfcch Colourful iftorsels as : the Lord 
Mayot'v shqw, : Carnaby '■ Street, » a 
Sbnb, ilu.qch’ and . even 4 foh even! rig’s 
eritertalnment",' , V;" 

: i Victoria Neuntark 


. 

" ^ W ' " Mji 


Jrtrnfnflp6^9T-T{urn 


Visual perception materials 
by Wilfred Brennan, Jean Jackson 
and Juliet Reeve ' . . 

Tehcbers : handbook • £2.50. Work- 
books 30p . ' pnd 35p . each,.’ Mastejf ; 
st'eucjl books . £5.95 each . Stimulus • 
cords £3,95-; Pahk Of 10 pupil profile 
sheets £1. . 

MaCmillan' . Education 1 ' Ltd, Hound- 
millsy Basingsfo ke, Hampshire.! * 

Lltofc Is a Mt of materials intended 
to , help,, children 1 develop visual 
perception skills. It is meant |o be 
useful both Tor the nortial range of 
children arid in the - diagnosis and 




TTte original Look materials were 
published in' 1972. This considerably 
eri|arg6d arid revised version consists 
essentially qF bight workbook*; n set 
" aminateti 'IstTtnulus cacds’’- for use 
the books; duplicator nlastert of 
‘ages from the books: a set of 


mum mo cooks: a set of 

profile, sheets for the’asSess- 

msrif: ftgd recording ' 1 of yiridlVidrinl 


Hiii series i»f slide folios for scam, 
diiiy students shows biological nv 
terns common to a wide variety of 
nrg.iimms. The slides arc mostly of 
diagrams, although there sre some 
photographs, including elecuomicw- 
graphs and drawings. 

In “Photosynthesis", the equaboa 
for the process is shdwn, then ibt 
structure of chloroplaslo and chloro- 
phyll, after which there are tx- 
planutory diagrams. The final slide 



K rovidcs data on the atmospheric bt- 
mce produced through photosyn- 
thesis. unfortunately, tne concept of 


children's performance; and a 
teachers’ handbook. 

Hiis handbook is virtually a short 
textbook on the whole subject of 
visual perception and its develop- 
ment. It Is written strictly, even 
sternly, from a behavioural-psycholo- 
gy viewpolnt, ond combines theore- 
tical : background with detailed 
teaching, objectives for each level. 

- The tone comes over at times like 
Teaching For Daleks.. "Reinforce- 
ment Inyolves rewarding the pupil 
foh . behaviour • which : tlie teacher 
wants , established , or .‘stamped 
in: . . .' " One can only get so far In 
understanding children s learning by 
treating them like overgrown rats. 

In view of the strict rationalism of 
the teachers’ handbook, It is siirpris- 
.Ing - or is it? - |p .find the work- 
books Illustrated In stylo of unre- 
lieved cute bl&pdness. They arc also 
/; AU io .alj, despite the deep re- 
search of its producers, this Is a 
dreadfully disappointing contribution 
to a field where good materials are 1 
urgently needed. • : ' • ; • 


the high energy bond in AH' 
appears in the notes. It would hnt 
have been useful to bring out mart 
clearly the differences between Cj 
and C\ plants. 

"Cell Respiration" follows a simi- 
lar format. It covers energy Hot 
( aguin with energy-rich bonds), 
anaerobic respiration, glycolysis, 
alcoholic fermentation, the structure 
and function of mitochondria, co- 
enzymes, electron transport, and 
Krebs cycle. 

In Hie third set. the nature ill 
enzymes is explored. Their charactw- 
istics are clearly set out and Be 
slides also show the concepts of as 
active centre, ullostcric enzymes usd 
the genetic control of enzyme pro- 
diictmn. In the notes, which uc 
meant to contain information bcyoM 
that required ut secondary level, Be 
lock ami key theory is presented u 
fact, but no mention is made oi me. 
wider view given by the induced ut 
hypothesis. 

Iimminolouy is an urea of grovjg 
imporfunce in biology, so the rnew- 
sion of n slide set oil this 'opic was a 
good Idea. It covers the production 
of iintilHHlies by lymplwcytesjt* 
anlihotly/antigen reaction, dkxw 
grouping, iinu tissue rejection. 

Ilotli plant and uninwl homowj 
are considered In the HTih . 
the numerical bins 
And iw there arc relatively few vn 
nids on the tuple, this set 
welcomed. U covers the dgroej 
structure of hormones, exnjnp 
hormone action and 
trol. An applied aspect Is rmsw 
the contraceptive pill. . 

The last two 
ed. "Replication of 
rial" is more sp^flcally 
with DNA, lls siroclure and ^ 

don, both at mq ecular 
chromosome Iev 7' h Ji?.LnHA 
considers the way injhich f 
in a cell mediates the produce . . 
proteins. ' 

Overall this is * ^ 
collection and the genwal 
of the graphics Is high, w 'it Mb RJ, 
that three or four 
need to be remade becauM O^-j 

ja stsmSSS 

hormone set- T>« 
errofs. and the Information 
sionally out of date. 

, The suggest Ions . . ^gfe^ant or- 
work are occasionally ine« e 
even inaccurate, as jn iw ‘Rdd, a 
to test for fats u « in 8 J _!L 0 ol. 
chemical not In 

for a (focade or more. There j 
useful teaching material hcIC ’ jA j. 
necdB revision. 


the TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


resources 



Children from Middle Row Primary School, London. vJden««nin 0 
contribution to the national Children’s Video Competition sponso^^y JVC 
(UK) and organized in association with the BrlUsV Film lastl tut^Tfie' bS 
entries will be shown at the end of International Video Week (Mav iijaiTn 
Saturday May 29 at the National Film Theatre, London. “ ( y 28J on 


Hidden from history 

by Liz Heron 

Although library shelves are by now persuaded of the ha<ir hictnri^i 
noanin^ with the academic fruits of Approach it could well be unecS 
Womens Studies for anyone tack- jy off-putting. But forget thTwall 
(mg the notion of how women are chart £ you know It. ? J£t deri 
hfdden from history nt classroom more thought and research has gone 
level for the first lime, there may imo putting these posters together 
5*57 than ron-bf-the-mlllTonKal 


Blues of 
the news 

Boy Blatchford on 
“Middle English” 


ETV — 

Middle English 

nV. Tuesday 9.53. Thursday 11.39. 


During this third term of transition 
from Writers' Workshop” to the 
freshly cast series “Middle English", 
mere are four new programmes cer- 
tain to capture the interests of 9-12 
year-olds in very different ways: 
Already clear is producer Peter 
Taber n 5 very firm conception of 
wnat is needed in the English clas- 


Womeirs Studies, for anyone tack- 
ling the notion of how women are 
“hidden from history" nt classroom 
level for the first lime, there may 
seem precious few resources to draw 
on. This series of posters should, 
however, fit the bill admirably. Thir- 
teen three-colour silkscreen prints 
form the first half of a two-part 
series, "Between Future and Past". 

It is un ambitious project, and it is to 
the credit of the Poster Film Col- 
lective that the posters manage to do 
justice to complex information and 
ideas, and are at the same time ac- 
cessible and appealing. For starters, 
they would make a dazzling wall 
display, with llicir bold use of colour 
and striking design that Incorporates 
found images and drawings, photo- 
graphs and collage with text and 
graphics. 

The chronology begins with 
Feudalism nnd women's plucc within 
the social and economic order, mov- 
ing on to explain how the witch- 
hunts were related to political up- 
heavals, and to the social basis of 
women's role as healers. Then 
there’s women's relegation to the do- 
main of the "nnturur in the scheme 
of rational thought, as the age of 
eiMhtenmanl dawned; the Victorian 
period with its contradictory images 
of womanhood; the influence of nhl- 
iBoinropy in moulding modern ideas 
of the family; and later the struggles 
for tho vote. This last includes w 
wealing break-down of when the 
wie achieved In different countries 
(How well known is it that New 
«aland and Australia led the wuy nt 
Be turn of ihe century, while Switzer- 
m only fcot there In 1972?} 

t Other areas covered urc vtnman'x 
under Nazism, the Depression, 
,im$ and its uftcrtnnth, how 
jjmsn were written into the bhicp- 
™t/or the Welfare Stntc, the inler- 
Si SPJWtmerism and domesticity 
Jfjhe Fifties and (he last decade's 
“P^fge of women's uctivism. 

J?!* mars this otherwise 
SS Nmi. That ts an ex- 

Bat><°u«J dac dsm ln lhc language 

in cis Scd ?* 1 explanatory anchor 
^.poster. For those yet to be 

“ a nwmmoth cn- 
Planned to take 
Evil? Hereford from 6-8 July. 
Be schools, industry and 

,s to rnisc conserva- 
Pknef5* S L.?? as “stewardship of 
attitude to 
fM Hhe uses of tech- 

*b?ft! Z S rs l a hard-working 
SL?- ®d«l dignatories, local 
bSIi an ^ teacncra, arc pre- 
u senes of events centred on 


Ji 8 10 he Conscrva* 

Piays include experimental 
fo agrochemicals. The 
ww-JW Values, In the 
SrE’ he presented by chut- 
"" Want and the 


product ever displays. 

The Poster Film Collective is a 

S of photographers, film-makers, 
ters and others, committed to 
producing educational resources 
within a perspective of social change. 
“Between Future and Past" is on 
exhibition at the Battersea Arts Cen- 
tre, Old Town Hall, Lavender Hill, 
London SW11 (223 8413) until May 
30, nnd later at the Cockpit Gallery, 
Princeton St. WC1 (405 5§34) as part 
of n larger exhibition of their work. 
"Between Future and Past” Poster 
Film Collective, BCM-PFC, London 
WC1N 3 XX. 13 posters, price £11.50 
(p&p £2.00). A teachers booklet is 
currently in preparation and will be 
available when the second part of the 
series is completed. 


1 . , . . . ■ . 

' a .»<••• . • 

■* . *. > • 1 1 ' 



fWfli 

* '/•«*-](! 1 


From a poster entitled "slave* and 
Angels: Women and the Industrial 
Revolution". 

NSPCC, as well as public bodies 
including the Information Office of 
the House of Commons, the IB A 
and the National Trust. ‘ 
Each will be supported by a^day- 
long conference. On July 6, ■ ® 
Schools Council team will discuss, the 
World Studies &-13 Project, jyhjle 
Lord Briggs will chair a seminar on 

E%SSi3SZSSS£& 

gI Twn% five 1. ^ 


will not only want to writ the exWW 
tions but also contribute themselves- 
Further details from Barry ffomety 
Eardlsland , Leominster, Herejora 

shire. ■ j_ 


sroom for this age range, whether an 
inner-city, small town or rural audi- 
ence. 

"New Story” (April 27, 29) fol- 
lowed the work of a television repor- 
ter in setting up, recording and edit- 
ing an item for the week-day local 
evening news programme, “Thames 
News . Ed Boyle was the featured 
reporter, liis story covering the Ann] 
instalments in the long-running tale 
of the Thames flood-Darrler's con- 
struction. The class of 12-year-olds 
with whom l viewed the programme 
were fascinated by the demystifica- 
tion of the filming process: the mis- 
erable working conditions for the 
crew, on location in the rain; the 
urgency of the deadline hanging over 
the day's work. * 

The documentary took us further 
behind the scenes into studio rehear- 
sal aqd to the feverish activities of 
the director's control room, hiccups 
with -the autocue, the last minute 
preparations and rehearsal mistakes 
of such familiar faces as Andre 
Gardner, and, in the event, the 
squeezing out of Ed Boyle's item - a 
whole day's filming come to nothing 
because a bigger story breaks - all 
made for compulsive viewing. 

“Stop Press" (May 4, 6) was an 
inspired production, devisea and pre- 
sented by poet Roger McGough, and 
on the improbable televisual subject 
of punctuation. McGough’s “punc- 
tuation show" consisted of a senes of 
studio sketches featuring a group of. 
actors and ' actresses dressed np 
variously as full-stops, commas. In- 
verted commas and question marks. 

McGough’s adventurous script 
further embraced the development of 
writing, and the purpose of punctua- 
tion arising out of the oral tradition - 
by way of a splendid game of 
Chineses whispers - and nis own 
delightfully observed ditty: “would 
be nice to be/an apostropne/floating 
above and/hovering like a paper 
klte/ln between the its". 

The book advisory services of the 
National Book League have in- 
formed the old series’ “About 
Books" slots for some years, and the 
first part of this week's “Middle 
Pages*’ (May 18, 20) pays a visit to 
Book .House itself, in south-west 
London, and to its annual Children’s 
Books of the Year exhibition. Pre- 
sented by Elizabeth Estensen, who 
seems as though she cares and knows 
something about children’s literature 
(not always true of children’s book ■ 
presenters), vie saw some of the in- 
side workings of the orgamsotion. 

■ The second part of the programme 
featured the outstanding; illustrative . 
work of Michael Foreman, filmed 
working with children at the NBL. 
Hifi' delicate line-drawings .and 
beautifully mixed colouis In such 
best- selling. titles' as "War and Peas” 
“panda’s Puzzle" and -'Trick a Track 
er u ' (tale: d f the animal kingdom's 
early discovery of the skateboard) 
transferred excellently, to the tetevi- 
sipn screen, with dramatised readings 
to accompany thpm. ■ ' 

' "Work’’ (June 8. IQ) is the final 
new transmission of the year, and is 
a sensitively compiled .and; hard-hi - 
ring documentary about childrens • 
views on apd attitudes to the worlds 

of work and unemployment, In addi- 
tion to a collection of interviews, the 
programme 1 focuses in detail on qje 
Medlar family’s circumstances: -Ihb 
Swwiil of the traditional mother/ 
father roles,, following the fathers 

redundancy. 


Desperate 
divisions 

by Victoria Neumark 

The Brandt Report sold 100,000 
copies In Britain. A World in Com- 
mon (BBC Radio 4, Weds, 7.45pm will 
have no news for that audience of 
uneasy liberals; it seems to be aimed at 
the first questionings of the sixth- 
former rather than the informed adult, 
n Jts style is hectoring, ft is far more 
e effective to hea r a Bengali minister say 
«d is really debt repaid in the mlnd of 
r - Asia" than to be told it by the presen- 
2 |er, but either way we do not need to 
5 ; hear it twice. The programme offers 
!r .vast over-simplifications. 

>f The message of Brandt Report, 
s- that, as William Clark of the World 
n Bank says, “the ship goes down as a 
i- whole" can be fuel to Reaganomics 
or the ameliorating capitalism oF Ed- 
ward Iicath. To make a coherent 
- statement about the world from all 
■ opinions is Impossible. 

L Nor are there, really, nny ‘‘facts". 
\ Tne first programme “A World in 
, Conflict", hinted as much in its com- 
. parison between the poverty of a 
1 Nepalese woman, old and wizened 
far beyond her 3J years and seven 
, children, with a Glasgow housewife 


Briefings 

Radio and tv 

For schools 

Merry-Go-Round (Monday, 11. (K 
Wednesday, 14.40 BBC I) 

The unit on “Energy begins b 


-del fishers" explore and 
exploit North Sea oil. 

Descubra Espruta (Tuesday, 14.40 
BBCI) 

wSc\) ter Spain ^ T}lursday ’ 9,05 

“Descubra" offers language work to 
second and third year students. “En- 
counter" concentrates on Spanish stu- 
dies. 

Finding Out (Wednesday, 11.02 ITV) 
Seven to nine year olds study the 
home and daily fife of Danish chil- 
dren and look at the country's his- 
tory, culture and industry. 

Nature (Wednesday, 14.45 VHF4) 
Why are people frightened by 
spiders7 What are the differences be- 


tween them and others insects? Eight 
to ten year olds investigate. 

My World (Thursday, £52 ITV) 
Very young children learn how 
boots float and what is needed to 
propel them. 

A Place to Live (Thursday, 9.35 
ITV) 




However, the programme-makers’ 
passion for reform was nor content 
to lay out this complicated ground 
without comment, nor were their 
perceptions profound enough to pro- 
voke new insights. ‘ 

Population, projected to touch a 
horrific 12 billion by the middle of 
next century, was the subject of the 
second in the series. It was Interest- 
ing to hear that (he Indian govern- 
ment was not prepared to admit that 
India was overpopulated, though it 
contains a fifth of the present world 
population. 

China was barely touched on - 
surely of interest as a counter-exam- 
ple? - and the relationship between 
prosperity and the birth-rate skated 
over. It Is hard to escape the feeling 
that the World in Common team 
spent the greater part of their budget 
on a visit to India. 

I am the last person to wish to 
deny the fascination of the Indian 
sub-continent. But no more than our 
own tiny Island does it contain all the 
problems and all the answers. These 
problems that we. have in common 
cannot be glossed over by focusing 
on regional experience, nor changed 
by exhortation. 


Tlie over-eights concentrate on the 
life cycle of the garden spider. 
Home Economics (Friday, 9.00 


Home Economics (Friday, 9.00 
BBCI) 

The last programme in this revi- 
sion series for O level and CSE 
students. 

That'd Be Telling (Friday. 9.05 
VHF4) 

Paul Kcens-Douglas introduces ex- 
tracts from his poem, "Dark Nite 
People" and Ills novel, “When Moon 
Shine". Then he tells eight to twelve 
year olds about the role of ghosts in 
Caribbean folklore. 

RHi^ious Education (Friday, 14.20 

“Christianity in Action" is a set of 
interviews on lives and careers. 

Continuing education 

Is There Life After School (Sunday, 
10.35 BBC]) V 

. A series looking at some of the 
efforts being made to bridge the gap 
between school and work. 

Twentieth Century European Authors 
(Sunday, 16.00 VHF4) 

Three programmes on German . 
writers begin with the Kafka enigma 
“Metamorphosis". 

Asian Links (Friday, 16.10 Radio 4> 
Members of the Asian communi- 
ties in Britain talk about their coun- 
tries of origin. 


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endpages ■■ 

Public visibility 

L. — J 


T"" : T» W n T , mM , IWu , nt 


Liz Heron on 
i photographic 
gallery ana 
workshop 


It’s only been a few months since the 
| corrugated tin was finally removed 
from the front of the Camerawork 
[premises in Bethnal Green’s busy 
Roman Road, to reveal an expanse 


/ 


I of glassy shop front and a spacious 
I gallery interior. Yet the gallery itself 
has been open for two years, hidden 
behind the final stages of building 
work. This suddert public visibility is 
the culmination of a project that 
germinated in the mid-seventies, and 
grew more ambitious and expansive 
in pace with the boom in 
documentary photography and the 
burst of funding that gave it added 
growth and encouragement. 

The climate has shifted dramatical- 
ly as sources of funding have dried 
up. Now there's less room for experi- 
ment and fewer outlets for the kind 
of work that flourished only a few 
years ago. At Camerawork, how- 
ever, the long haul of fundraising 
and organizing has paved the way for 
a much-needed focus of support for 
social documentary photography and 
for vital forms of photographic criti-i 
cism. The project organises exhibi- 
tions in the gallery, administers lour- 
I fag shows and publishes (he 
■•Camerawork” journal. It also has the 
I facilities to promote the use of 
photography In education and in 
community activities, with darkrooms 
that are open to individual members 



*WL 










PTBIO by TOSHA ZIFF ot Youth 


and outside groups, ut special con- 
cessionary rates for unemployed peo- 
ple, students, young people and 
Tower llnmlots residents. 

The darkrooms arc no makeshift 
arrange me nts; they were originally 
modelled on the kind of facilities to 


S n r-?^T S J ta,k l to Zita A,bes > author of 
The Child Under Stress” 

Dyslexia and 

root causes 


For more titan 40 year*, children with 
learning difficulties - whatever, the 
the concern of 
Zita Albert. -A child psychologist .'she 
has become a leading authority on 
emotionally disturbed schoolchildren. 
,^ n ,'P ie UhUd Under Stress, she 
provides a practical guide for teachers 
a, J“ P a ™ ms °A how many difficulties, 
whiefi ;fte q uen«y lead to forms of 
dyslexia, can be overcome. 

“The amazing thing is that while 
, we are oil anxious to find out exactly 
1 '^r- wr ?"S. whh children who* 
have difficulty in learning' to read 
and write, we -are not. even agreed 
on^^heiher dyslexia, as . such, exists 



neurolpgicai. in most .cases', r .believe 
T* ^usesarethe, result of interact 
tton of. the neurological .aridpsyebo- 
joalcai -factors,. So ■: the- freatfoejit ‘ hi; 
volVes analyshig; 1 root' - causes' :and; 
neMf to be comprehensive^ ; . 
f Prof... Albes; practises Mr special 
..approach- : at ppwnlands College, 
Haywafdi Heath, which she founifdd 
in 197i ortginaUy in Brighton;: It is. a 
idsldentia) School for emotionally 
distorted children. With learning, gjffil 
ciulpes, ; and became an educational 
trust Ip 1972, ; : ' 



__ ..__oiigh Le.nitj. , 

social services, ;but a faw,' including 
some frprp abrpad-, are wni: privately, 
Aflef an Initial; assessment; fl;: pro* 
gramme cdmblning education, arid 


therapy is worked out for aach child. 
It: includes specially-devised exercises 
to remedy their motor dysfunctions 
and close attention is also paid to 
diet. 

. For formal schooling the children 
are taught' In small groups according 
to their maturity and age; Invariably 
they need remedial work in reading 
and writing. There Is a Strong emph- 
asis on practical work too; with daily 


classes in subjects like cookery, 
needlework, carpentry, art and craft. 

Ift, addition sessions of psychoi- 
drama, art . and music therapy take 
playe regularly, ds well as group dis* ; 

jgjj? ?* 11 P 1 ?, 44 '* tp Involve'ithe " 
children In each 1 Others* ' problems 
‘ PgcTsd encourage them;tQ help, each' 

J ■ go, Ph to. tpk6 iC§B and O- 
Ipyel examinations^ while 1 others re* 
sbhdols;- Currently 10 
30. Children (three-quarters of 
. whbm, we boys) I are follow! p- rv ‘" 

, and- Guilds Phase ! 
culture.jhdoopcrat 
ton Agnfcu Itur$T Cq 
sbrular coufs©;^ catering.; 

■ Remarkably.- ohly foiit. ;C Jiildreh : 
hpve so far tailed v to respond and 
have 1 had. to. leave becaiuiethey re- 
medical treatment. 
V r f, .u A ! bes hersolf sl| Pngly main- 

taJqs thaf recourse to drifas is not the 
answer to enipdonal problems. Nor 
|s any ■ punishment used -at Down- 
lands. , . , . . . : . •; 

} /■■#, 8. a window there 



of the firat hospitals for handicapped 
children In Yugoslavia and then after 
he war worked amongst refugees for 
the united Nations nnd other organ- 
nlsatlora concerned with rcliabflfta- 
tfSHi , sh ® settled in Hastbmirne In 
iy69 to be near her dnughor who Is 
mnrricd to nn Rnglishinan. 

In fact Downlnnds hns just 
undergone a radical change, forced 
by finoncla 1 pressures, Tiffs month, 
while retaining Its function as a 
.j ' , U , J ws b «ome a full-time 
residential home as well. The prob- 
lems of the children sent there are 
broader. Apart from learning difficul- 
ties, many manifest behavioural prob- 
lems as well. ‘ 

More care staff arc being rc- 


bhick ami while cnUgcrs . m ,| | n ii 
"' ,s|, uig iiMi' dnmg f. K j|i. 
; , S S Km'ScIiiisu it aic hw iih||. 
Milu.il d.irkriHiins. m»hu* uk(i colour 
equipment. I here is a se|Mia(c film- 
processing room, facilities r«. r sj„k- 
mid prim copvmg. dry mound no 
eipupniem ami a l.uninaiing m.ichme 
In seal and pioteel inoiinied ph,»i„. 
graphs in shot | uhal’s needed to 
produce am t lung from a sm,.| c 
photograph to a emnpleie and 
professionally finished exhibition. 

r n S r , Sl ' V* P r,Hrc “ vs iMIllciil ,111.1 
Jull fuL ill ties for the piodmtion of 
‘(apcMidc shows. 

Allluitigli the facilities at Roman 
Road have their doors open six da vs 
a week and there are three full-time 
darkroom workers on hand to offer 
help and advice, money Mill stands in 
the way of their potential I vim: ful- 
filled As worker. Richard Harris, 
observes, cuts have made schools see 
photography as a Itixui) activity 
One local school had to withdraw 
its students from a project that was 
being set up. simply because the 
money fur photographic materials 
could not he found. Another school 
arranged for students to come on the 
understanding that they financed 
materials themselves, hut the costs 
proved prohibitive, despite the 
cncnpcr-ihan-comnn: rciul prices 

Camerawork charges for its bulk- 
bouplil film and paper. 

Its ironic that with the benefits of 
u massive capital outlay in equipment 


... . — * *»• *-* in omviii 

ut their disposal, ninny of the educa- 
tional groups that only a Tew years 
ago would have been in a position to 


he found In a college offering a de- 
gree or diploma course in photogra- 
phy, and house mi array of sophisti- 
cated equipment that can produce 
work to high technical standards. A 
communal darkroom that can 
accommodate a lurge group has nine 

"This may well involve social factors 
previous tensions in family back- 
ground, So wc believe very much in 
tile cooperatfon of parents and soclnl 
workers". 

Traf. Albes, who is 63, trained 


. , ■■■ « 1'x^liiiill || l 

take advantage of this no limner 
have the financial basis to do so. As 
a result the darkrooms arc under- 
used. 

Among those who have taken up 
what s on offer is a group of 15 to lfi 
F n u ‘‘bridging course" from 
DanesFord nnd Huggcrslon schools, 
where photography Js u-.cil very 
much us a way of huildinu confidence 
through the acquisition of u practical 
skill; a group of six young Asfinis 
mini the Montcfiore adult education 
centre in the heart of the East End 
Asian tummunily; a group of teen* 

cruited. At present there arc six of 
them and ulso six teachers. In addi- 
tion the facilities arc heina expanded 
m accommodate up to 3fi children. 

“We shall, of course, retain the 
same approach tu the children's 
einotionul and educniiunnl problems 
and maintain our Informal family 
atajosplicru", stresses John Egford 
who has been the I Icadnuisicr 
throughout. 

“Wc strive to he •*homa ,, Tor every 
child and to help them build up happy 
relationships with both the stuff hud 
their peers". 

Mr Egford is also becoming in- 
creasingly aware of the need to eilu- 
cato the children for leisure. The 
majority arrive convinced that 
amusement must Involve spending 
money. So lie lays groat emplmsis on 
showing them how in rely on their 
own resources for entertninmcnt. 

Snooker, tabic tennis, roller 
skating both in the gym and 2!d-i»cro 
grounds, swimming, television iuid n 
for dancing are 
ivided. In 


•igc gujs working with tiu n „ 

<"vi" 

thrown out of youth h °ri’ C k. u l)CtD 
Richard Harris explains) 11 ^ 
been using phoingronhv snerift 
fi V develop inimcnca| P sk y i]ls P ^ 
i be dark room workers fwi 
'« ^ early days and see ,hok 
{ft as •nsiUfing u community tt 
tli.u will attract more interesting 
project s work. The two new la 
ers l>.ive Ciordon and Anna K?b 
“'b “'wnipfoyed until they ^ 

. c r in March ^ 

, ! i >*; ,,r f . M b( scheme, are undeter- 
red by financial obstacles and f«] 
h.it lundraiMiig will get done swh. 
him. nr that alternatively the 
rnranx could subsidfic thie notTi 
insitiun to nay , through the revea K 
brought in fro,,, heltcr-off users and 
those at lending classes. 

liavc Gordon became interested ig 
photography in his teens and w« , 
volunteer helper in some of Camen- 
work s earlier activities. Now a 2] 
and after a long period of unemploj. 
n:ent his first priority is to tackle the 
issue of unemployment, but with the 
camera in the hands of those that 
form the dole queues, and not simply 
focused on them. To this end he s 
organising a photo-group Tor younz 
unemployed people. 

Anna Knlpy lias experience of Ki- 
ting up a community resources centre 
in south London and is full of idea 


for making the darkrooms' a» 
more accessible to people who con 
benefit from them and at the m 
mein don’t know how. She is ni 
ning a ten-week practical works!* 
on images of "women's empioyme 
nnd unemployment" which involv 
tuking pictures as well os darkroo 
work and studying existing imager 
This also feeds into a GLC-funck 
project to creme nn archive i 
women ^ nnd unemployment whii 
Anna Knlpy is coordinating. Otb 
ideas in the pipeline include a soci 
documentary group. » local histoi 
group and a group specializing 
photomontage. 

addition they cun always help in the 

S iardens and greenhouses; about half 
earn judo and some go riding (for 
which parents pay extra). 


Pocket money or between 5Up and 
lor thu tuck shop and a 


icy 

uc 


on age, « 


record player 
amongst the recreations pro 



Wp n week, 

allocated Tor 

cursions Into Haywards Health, par 
(iculnrly to the disco every Thursday 

Gom nets of this kind arc encouraged 
mid welcomed by the local coin* 
inanity. 

Prof. Allies Is less Involved in Down- 
In mis. .Shu is now devoting more time 
to writing und she Is well advanced on 
another hook, on the roots of violence 
in society; she nlso plans books os 
Downs Syndrome and epilepsy- . 

A large section of the Dyslejoa 
book is devoted to the Importance w 
routine . screening. She suggwi 
checks on ull children at six rnontu 
nnd three years. . ... 

“Motor skill dysfunctions de 
at this early stage can usually « 

righted; hut experience shows tlwi^ 

treated they easily lead to*™ 
learning difficulties later on 

"When the child himself, ha PJ 
rents and teachers are a v ™ re -‘. 
reading problems are due td a 
function rather than mental hang 
or sheer laziness, farther psydijg 
;ica] damage con be prevented- _ 
regard this damage as a far pe . 
haadicap. for it can dominate tw 
child’s whole schooling.. l, 

“Moreover, only by analog tw 
causes of handicap is there any 

of prevention. I belleVe 
signs that the pattern of the. dui » 
Information system is be ' D r ^ 
creasingly distorted by ij 16 s ' r ®^ ^ 
modern life- And it Is fae duty^ 
every one, particularly ^ 

teachers, to prevent any further 
terioratlon". ■ 

The Child Under Stress 

Zita M. Albes. Published by j* 

Granary Press, Granary 

leluh SaUertan, Devon. 

0 8ffl6 006 4 £6.75. 

Details of short courses for , 

m special 

Alba is organising, from * 1 
Mansions, S$2 Termfnns Road, w 
bourne. BNM 3 DP. 


f 



the TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21,5.82 



35 


F riends keep talking about Arno Stern 
He is a genius with children they suy- 
with him they develop the confidence to 
express themselves graphically. He is n 
researcher with till instinct for the ori- 
ginal: his passion a concern with a world-wide 
' language of form in drawing and painting. He 
is the possessor of unique documents on the 
most primitive forms of such expression 
They lend me one of his books! It is, i n 
part, an account of voyages to those few 
remaining spots on earth where western man 
has not imposed himself: the bush of Maureta- 
nia. the virgin forest of Peru, the Oxaco area 
of Mexico, parts of the Niger, Gimtcimila, 
Ethiopia, Afghunistuu. . . . 

But the book is nlso un impassioned attack 
on la pollution scolaire, und the “deforming'' 
effects of teaching in encouraging competi- 
tiveness and aggression where ideally coop- 
eration and self-confidence would reign. 
Mothers who go out to work are also targets 
for criticism, as are journalists: ‘‘always smiling 
but always in a hurry, caught between 1,000 
pressures, just about capable of producing the 
kind of paper which isn’t of much interest in 
itself but likely to be redeemed by photos”. 

Impossible not to feel just a little bit comba- 
tive on going to meet him for the first time. 
Impossible, too, not to feci that he is already 
on the attack. As we conic in out of the rain 
of a wet Paris evening, we have scarcely time 
to take off our drippirtg coats. Arno Stern 
ushers us into a small windowless room, the 
“enclosed space" where his pupils rid them- 
selves of “the parasites” of the daily round, - 
The room is empty but for a giant puint 
box: a table with an inset palette of rainbow 


ndpages 


assion 


r r „v n 5 rr,t ■ ■*. «. 

Arno Stern has spent many years 
travelling the world, looking at 
the way children express 
themselves in their art. Anne 
Corbett went to see him in Paris 


"Look at this book”, he explodes. "’Yellow 
the colour of tragedy’, ‘a house with only one 
chimney indicates a child is conscious of hav- 
mg only one parent’. And that by someone 
with a research doctorate!” 

,. n ^ n “f sts he . j s not a teacher imposing his 
standards on his "pupils" . Nor is he an 

HC ' S - ,heir ,,servanr - Producing for 
them paper, paint and drawing pins to fix their 
work to the waits. Can we see one of his 
groups in action? “No." Can we at least see 
their work? ft isn’t made to be shown." 

find if"® ° f hiS - b ° 0ks he admils o!d fiends 
find he s grown intransigent. But, he pleads 

the cause is so important: to defend the right 
to self-expression, to point the finger at those 
who are destroying it by their teaching and 
their theories.” As he talks about the way the 
groups work, mixed in age from 5 to 50, he 
paints a beguiling picture of cooperation, 
absorption and self-confidence, engendered by 
this chance to "be themselves". 


It is now more than 30 years since he first 
conscious of the repressive effect of 
nstitut.ons on personality. At the end of the 

from the intemmen * camp 
tor Jews in which, as an adolescent of Ger- 
man Jewish origin, he had been confined. He 
himself had no diplomas, not even a proper 
secondary education. He was sent to work in 

h,°T u nage and told to B el on with teaching 
ine children to paint. 

rJpnlS? J? tal ^ lonE 10 notice that they 
esented being told to do a picture of a pot of 

flowera. They wanted to be left free. Hd also 
noticed very quickly that the forms of “free 
expression were repetitive. So he set out to 

didn't^ hnvp 1 " 11 W “ S , an advanta 8 e that .! 
didn t have any particular training. I didn’t 

have to liberate myself from a theory.” What 
emerged, he said, was a "grammar" of signs n 
language of plasticity. 

This started him off on a world-wide search 
to see whether there was not a “plastic Inn- 
guage which was truly universal, similur signs 

A d H be i° Und n T' 8 riftfarcnt races and 
cultures. And that is indeed what lie did find 
Bravely setting off with his "pallet le-iable’’ to 
deserts and remote mountains, to the bush and 








Children af work, 
photographed hv Arno 
Stern in Rthitt/da, 
Guatemala, Afghanistan 
and Peru. 


st :the depth of the forest, he came across many 
of .unschooled adults and children willing to draw 
le for him. They all produced the same curves 
ip and circles, the same spiky suns and human 

le u- mS ’ 1,1 ? y L al1 shared a passion for enclosing 
‘ e objects within each other. 8 

in i? 11 * he . fc,und ,he cx Pression changing radi- 
n cally and "creativity lost” the moment they 
8 «ime in contact with a teacher. In Le Monde 
ties Autres, Stern recounts the shock - and' 
■y aismay - of coming across an allegedly “puTc” 

n S“ t< / na i a . n comr ™ n 'ty who nil offered to 
draw for him - and produced identical looking 

n # ,c ? e "V , ! r5 fl cockerel,” they 

a beamed. He later found the duplicated pages 
I they were copying from. 

1 In III years of travel and 30 years of “cdu- 
1 eating . Stern hns amassed tens of thousands 
« of drawings, pnimings and photos. He would 
ike to sec them exploited hy nil those in* 
i crested in creative forms of expression: 
tcnchers more interested in cdiicatinu than 
teaching , biologists, anthropologists, nnd pre- 
I historians for example. He feels that time is 
running out. The communities he has visited 

r ® rc ^ ora fa th*? edge of a volcano 
winch is 1 likely to erupt and sweep them away 
for ever . Thus, for him, the onward march of 

illiteracy 11 ^ world ' wjde ca, npaigiis against 

But the project for a research and training 
centre needs funds and space, which Stern 
hhnscIF cannot provide. There is interest in it 
from some of the hundreds of French, Swiss-.—- 
Italians and Germans who have been on his 
creative education courses. He would like now 
to make contact with similarly minded English 
and Americans. You may have a creutive 
approach in school, he says, but 1 cannot 
believe that it does not impose repressive and 
competitive standards too. 

As the evening comes to nn end, Midtefc, 
his wife, brings in a plateful of a Japanese ’ 
vegetanan delicacy. R is a spiced choux paslrv 
mixture, deep fried, and covered with crunchy 
batons. It looks like a dish of horse chestnuts 
I m struck by the symbolism. Rather like Arno 
Stern himself, they give the appearance of 
bemg prickly. But persist. For they have a 
highly original flav our. 

Amo Stern can. be contacted at 30 roe de 
Crenelle , 75007 Paris, tel (I) 548 7555 . His 
books include ; L’Expression, ou L'Homo Vu!- 
canus 797.?, revised 1975; Le Monde des Au- ‘ 
Antonin et La Mdmoire Organtque 
J97S, (all published by Delachaux et Niestli. 
NeuchAtel and Paris). 












Classified Advertise in ents c “ c »^ 

Index to Appointments vacant, Wanted and other classifications 7 ' ] 


Appointments 

vacant 

Nursery Education 
Headships 36 

Other Appointments 36 

Primary Education 

Headships 36 

Deputy Headships Senior 
Masters/Mistresses 37 

Heads of Department 38 

Scale 2 Posts 38 

Middle School Education 

Headships 38 

Deputy Headships Senior 
Masters/Mistresses 38 

Remedial Posts 38 

English 38 

Mathematics 39 • 

Modem Languages 39 

Music 39 

Science 39 

Ocher than by Subjects 39 

Secondary Education 


Art and Design 
Careers 

Cor nine rci nl Subjects 

Computer Studies 

Economics 

English 

Geography 

History 

Home Economics 

Humanities 

Mnl he hi aril's 

Modern Languages 

Music 

Pastoral 

Physical Education 
Religious Education 
Rural Studies 
Science 
Social Studies 
Speech and Drama 
Technical Studies 
Other than by Subjects 


Sixth Form and Tertiary 
Colleges 


Headships 

39 

Headships 

69 

Deputy Headships Senior 


Heads of Department 

69 

Masters/Mistresses 

39 

Scale 2 Posts 

69 

Remedial Posts 

39 

Scale 1 Posts 

69 


Special Education 
Headships 

Deputy Headships Senior 
Musters/Misircsses 

Heads of Department 

Scale 2 Posts 

Seale | Posts 

Appointments in Scotland 


Independent Schools 
Headships 

Deputy Headships Scniur 
Mas I crVMis tresses 

Art and Design 

Classics 

Economics 

English 

Geography 

History 

Home Economics 
Mathematics 
Modern languages 
Music 
Pastoral 

Physical Education 
Religious Education 
Science 

Speech and Drama 
Technical Studies 
Other than by Subjects 


Preparatory Schools 
I Icadshins 

Deputy HcruUhip* Senior 
Mailers/ Mistresses 

Art amt Design 

Classics 

English 

Geography 

Histoty 

Mathematics 

Modern Languages 

Music 

Physical Education 
Science 

Other than by Subjects 


Adult Education 


74 Vnulh and ('niuiiiiiniiy 
■Service 


75 Overseas Appointment* 
75 


7 ' S Administration 

75 Luciil Ediii'iiiiDi] Authority 

75 


Colleges of Further Education 
Directors and Principals 75 

Other Appointments 75 


Colleges and Departments of 
Art 


Other Appointments 


Child Care 


Educational Psychologist.* 


79 Examiners 


Universities Appointments 79 Miscellaneous 

Colleges of Higher Education 

Other Appointments 79 Outdoor Education 


7‘J English as a Foreign 

language 

s " Appoint mcnls wanted K 

Educational Courses K 

Personal 

Announcements R 

83 

Exhibitions y 

84 For Sale and Wanted p 


Holidays and 
Accommodation 


Home Exchange Holidays 87 


Partnerships 


Properties for Sale 
85 and Wanted 


Nursery Education 


■nbritloB. ( 


Other Appointments 


ultntiay Rnadj Bath DAB 4 EZ 
— m Bouton 


tliout di 
at 


IT. byal 

iractor or 


HEAD TRA 

£u]?te a!) 

CHER, 

if, 

111 

VI 

IOUP 4. 
tea from 

nncetf toaci 
post, lensb 

iars fo 
la frDr 

ir 

4! 

uptembor 

passible 

op as suan c 
tlicrear tat*. 

la 


ssuroooo 

PRIMARY SCHOOL 

Head Teacher (Group 5 ) 

SKELTON INFANT SCHOOL 

Station Lane, Skolton, Cleveland TS122LR. 

Required for September 1 982 or as booh as possible 
thareaflor a suitably qualified and experienced leacher 
(or this well established school. The school Is housed In 
modern buildings providing open plan accommodation, 
Including nursery provision. 

Forms of application and further details are obtainable 
from and returnable lo the County Education Officer, 
Education Offices, Woodlands Road, Mlddleaborough, 
Cleveland TS ISBN. 

Letters of application should Include details of education, 
training, qualifications, and experience, togelherwilh Ins 
names and addresses of two referees. 

Financial assistance wilh household removal expenses 
is available In approved cases. 

Closing dale: 1 1 ih June. 1 982. 


j| 0Q Inner London 


Education Authority 

T» 


ROBERT OWEN (N) 


-Vi:;-";,, .CONLEY STREET, . ..-Vs- 
BJ.ACKWALL LANE, SE1Q OEB ' 

Applicants aftt Invif^ from teabherslviiih 
trafoifOfcl and experience In nursery edUcatfqn'for 
Ine headship Qf this sphobl whlbhfshowvaparit. 
RolL41 full.tlme and 83 part time. Burnham group 
2f plus Inner tendon; allowance, - 

Phaseser^^foblscdp see foh&$ieailoh.foifa 
and further details to toe Education Office, 
EO/T$iQ/BA, Cpupty Hall, London 3E1 7PB. 
Qlqsfng datQfprjh$r$$im 0/ completed applies* 
tfon forms 4 junas* 


WARWICKSHIRE 


AptilcaUoria ar$ Invited fr 


The Borough Is wllhln easy reach of Cenlral London and 
bordered by Epplng Forest. 

REQUIRED FOR JANUARY 1 0B3 OR EARLIER IF 
POSSIBLE 

DOWNSELL JUNIOR SCHOOL 
Down sell Road, London E15 2BS 

Headteacher 

Group 6; £1 1,022^12,129 plus Outer London j 
Allowance £498, plus Social Priority 
Allowance £201/£276. 

Roll 360 

Applications ar6 invited from suitably qualified and 
experienced teachers for the post o! Head Teacher. 

Closing date: June 4th. 

. Application forma obtainable (on receipt of alargsB^f;! 
from and returnable tq the Chief Education Otflcar, 
fawdon Bd rough of Waltham Foraat. Municipal Officer 
High. RoM, Leyton, London 610 2 QJ. 

' V^SthSTR 

terte fw) cuvad 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


PRIMARY headships 

conHW“ art 

BROMLEY 

LONDON BOROUGH OF 

CRAV PRIMARY 

Hffl^°S°reBt, S« . Mary Cray, 
nrolnaton, Kant BRS 4 AR, 
hKd TEACHER, GROUP 5 . 
Applications oro Invited from 
■ulMbly qualified mid experl- 
■need teachers far the abovn 
oast, tenabla from Septem- 
ber. 1983 or oe soon as poaal- 
Ole thereafter. 

Application forme and 
further details available from 
the Director or Education, 
flutinymend. llromley Lane, 
Chlslehurat. Knot BR 7 SLif 
(foolscap s.B.a. . please) in 


DEVON 

Pi ease bob dl 
tnent on page i 


5ar? , vs5’.,8? — 

1 IOOIO 


DORSET 

ESMsneras. 


Poole ** ' " •'ono. upt 

pSc:®t. ..... 
ar 2us.. 6 wSSa. for thl - 

ru«^ ,C dVt l Sfl. [rmn ffl th 

rino orficBr " D?i! lh * 6tar- 
Educotlon r 6 ff|cB St,r S Araa 
Ilouao. IHchmond 
nomnuth BHa gEBnl 1 Bour- 
Y f a.u.n. ciosina 1ILJ r ®°o , Pt 
JjLHQ. 1983 . j ggKg^feogjg 

DORSET 

BT MARY'S CP 

fe?|OOL° LLED> primary 
P6?2Lp r 3, Abl * M ' Hherborne 
SCHOOL 018 C ° UNTV «MT 

m 

□orclieater. DTI 1 XJ* 

cnl> ■•>■•.> < 38394 1 XJ VfggVg 

DORSET 

Lytchett > 


BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 
MILTON KEYNES DIVISION 
TWO MILE ASH COUNTY 
MIDDLE SCHOOL 
Two Mile Aali. Milton Koynea 
Applications are Invited rur 
the Headship Of this Group 6 
purpose built middto school 
deelansd for 480 pupils,, aged 
from 8 to 18 years- This la a 
new school due far romplo- 
Uon around Easter 1983 , The 
Hesdehip will Uu available 
from January JOBS. In the 
first Instance tho school will 
ester for the o to 13 ago 
range until new render first 
schools are built In tho nrca. 

Assistance with removal ex- 
penses and rented housing 
may ba avallubln In approved 
cases and thorn Is a wide 
range of housing to buy In tho 

Application Forma and 
further details available rrom 

i M H parks MA. Education 
rfleer. Milton Keynes nivl- 
■Ion, wolverton House, Strat- 
ford Road. Wolvorton Mill, 
Milton Kaynea MK 13 5 NY on 
receipt or a roolscap stamped 
addressed envelope. ( 33968 ) 

110010 

CALDERDALE 
metropolitan borough 

EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 

m D C B H N 0 D 0 E L NF °° T CE ‘ C » J 

Blackwood Hall, 

Luddendenfoot. Hnlirax HX 2 
6 AU 


Kr,„^ HUMBER8ID E 

& ou l« r *r>. 


vsrly, North Nn r W u t D »- 
■hould°be °r eTu P /n T* 

"Mfn 

KENT 

fflPBBUKr- 

nbi& 


■ the” hVJj Invited Tor 


Offices J lag 


jrrrnraS"“ 

January, jg 


Head teacher oVou p " * . 

es.T». .iffi 


’* wfi-oueHried anti experi- 
enced teacher la renulratj fur 
the HEADSHIP of In la Group 
5 ,uf ,: uf 0 r l ™»? h A appointment 


will be from AuaSat I B 83 nA 
ifter° 0n ** r,UB *‘ b,B thoro- 
Application Turma and 
further details obtainable ton 
receipt o f foolscap a.Vo" 
ffont the Chlof Education 
gmeer, Northnote House, 
North gate . Halifax. If XI 1U8 
completed forms 
■ should be rsturnud by 4th 
June isaa. f3892Sl 11 0010 


OUMBRIA 
COJIJJTY COUNCIL 

i^ s o c oi LE pn,MAnv 


hng'ofii^ 1 * sta d 

Education < 5 rriceT tBr ?r, P tij ?5 

Juno.' "l l 8 B CI (? , 9 l sS 3 } d,,, t 1 oVn! 


HAMPSHIRE 

IJEDLANDS COUNTY 
SCHOOL 

iioli orrico . 0 fcpftSiS 

a. 

HAMPSHIRE 

8 T. JOHN'S C.B- 

Iic;ho T oi . OLLED1 infant 

Lucks Heath. Nr. 

Southampton 

AOT&i&dns. \** s 


enojaas S A E i rl5^ f PleBSB 
H th Juna. Cl 0,1 "D d “‘" 

ESSBSR 01 WELLB 

TE P A8ii N E T R MENT op head 




iCONTR°LLBD> 

WeTla? r f N 5* VDF U . n brld 0 " 

°roup gj R 0 || § 8 
^RPjfentlonaars ln- 

“ultably qualiriad pi 

S!°ieR' nt trom T 




g£Sv"&4 

fuARtf^aL (a^e^e ! 1 ptaasai 
L r f °™ ‘h e Di v la lone) Education 

aHH&swwu- 

■Mmnaur* 


..on., 

Sf? s f ffKBi ftp- 

Mised . Ond_ Infant_ school. 


Seascato. 
TCgunty mix 
|07 on roll) 


ounty mix oil 4*11 ynurs. 


" ■ LT.oiJi and returnable to the 

Dlvlalonel Educitfnn Afrrnmss 


S'"'" 1 ' s 

PltPlhstt ilsi.i s. s ■ . 


HAMPSHIRE 


, Juflher dotal Is anti applicn. 
^{yi r _ m “ , fr Pl n *>311 Assistant 
aireator of Etlunniinn. Unluu 


KjJ; - ‘ Match HtroVt ." 

d2tid ha r V n n ■- ,u i uoin. 

f S rm " J should bn rn- 
SHSt. br 4 June. 1388 . 
IM40 » 110010 


iWfAA , T V 8?!i'oOL I ' NTY 

Off Ulioolore Wav. 

nssiniiHiiike. naii bll 

II oq Hi rod 1 st January, laas. 
Group 4 . Ilondtodclior. 

for sppllratlon form 


a _ — t — ■ «ipi«ii»miun iurm 

S 1 ?... A /m? Education Offlcar. 

n,,, H rn , 4 * voto 

1 LU*. Ua "hlDStako. R 031 


DEUUYS1I1RE 

COUNTY KOI INCH. 

" TAV !i!lM: M,0, > 

IIBAIIHIIIP 

front *sipS.«i ,,na ■ , . pn Invl tnd 
.Area!. - Priurlty 

, 8«mnmL“ l i" ,, iiiH3 . ‘itl?. 11 ’ 

■ • 5po?ciilS?“‘i5 u r * ,, vi" , 

: jbw" V 

•: . 110010 


riusiiui data for receipt of 
Junn. 1082 . ( 50300 ) 110010 

HERTFORDSHIRE 

COUNTY COUNCIL 


KlRKLEES 

ISfiaffifi COUNCIL 

feM 8CHooL 

prBdley Roulavard, 

Sheo^rldao, Huddersfield HD 2 

A pp 1 [canons are Invited rrom 
- j“*Yoaiy «* peri Bn cod teachers 
r. „ H?*D| h; IP of this 


..suitably expo/iBncod teachers 

ORqLp 4 school which* caters 
f°r tns spa- range i to 7 
y|" Tlis appointment will 

Swjler^f^pofee? ^ ° r 

Further partloulsrs and ap- 
pllontlon forms (s.a.f.e. 

from the Director of 


lit. AH tf.Aciier IOROUF 4 > 

Unnulintl fur January 10 Q 3 . 
The Oiivcrnnrn Invite applicn- 
Huns I rum suitably quollflod 
iiuit rxfinrleiiced . nrartlslnn 


S sara. The n 
sta from Ji 
oorller ir pasi 
Further par 
plication ft 
nloaso) from 


Wire iiiirimsns. 
I'lirilinr purl 


wire uiiriiiisns. 

I'urilinr purlktilnrs anil nn- 
iillriitliiii forms In.u.e.) from 
([in 1)1 visional Education 
Offlifir. Ilortrorjlsiiirn County 
(imint'll. Tim CJ mu ijf). High 
diikci. Hieviinnun mn snn to 
hn roiuriiwl lo tbs Chairman 

B r Govni-iKirs, at the schonl. 
If 'JBth Mny I 0 R 3 . * 3 B Ml , 010 


pate, IluddorsFleld HD 1 6 QW 
to whom completed forms 

8 mat be returnad within 14 
□ys of the appearance pf thla. 
not lea in Hi a prdss. 1394651 


OXFORDSHIRE 

COUNTY COUNCIL _ 

Proelana. . . • 

Required for January 1883 . a 
||nsdtaocjisr for thlji Opup 3 



RY SCHOOL 
roolana. _ 

tequlred for January 1983 . a 
DBdtaDCher Tor this aroup 3 
IIIsbo Primary school with 
PprOKlmataly 100 on roll, 
rsslsnd la 7 miles, from Ox- 


approxImateTy 100 on roll 
Frasland Is ’ n * 

ford. 

Application forms am 
run her parliculera. art avail 
able from the Chief Eduoetloi 
Officer, Maccleaflsld House 
New Hoad, Oxford 0 X 1 IN/ 


COUNTY COUNCIL 

-ALLOWANCE ES13 p.a. 


> TiSSnSiS expenses In approved cases. 

• c«SS^? iy .o 0U8ln Q may b® available. 

,y»mpiBte Surrey Vacancy Usl" available on request. 

0 HEADSHIPS 

Hhdhead H ' LL C0UNTY FIRST 

!S^ ,J gACHE R required September 1982 or aa goon as 
6reafter for Qrou P 2 F,rs t School tor pupils aged 


NEWHAM 

neCvham BOROUCh OF 

Baraa. 

consldarad', ' ,PPllCant " «»» bo 

PBrt?c P u]S?i l ^S»« forma/further 


NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

ST GREGORY'S R r 
lower school c 

Northampton” NNi 3BD 
Appoint mont^of Heed 

Group 3 


— SEPTEMBER, 1983 . if 
ASSSf f-*JwmSn CithoKi 

|^>n ^n t, | l s D pVe^ba n r? m - 

..Closing data: lo days af- 
advert. PPaarBnCB ° l th '* 

fessrfaffg3 r s ,n,pto ^"fi i ?!i 


SANDWELL 

Wsdneabury * 
Required for September, 
HEAD TEACHER - Oroup 

'^^ffi , ./ 0 r aTol,.“b^ 

Hv£n -^fflasai-K 

i a JJ eB L l ‘ Jn .. Department. 
yAf?' ^. 9t MlUlands? r n?o 
i9i° a ,lna t,B,a 7,h 

^^"nf'lng or mem bars 
mi.itVl A«lhorlty will dls- 

q unify. An equal oppor- 
tunity employer. ( 39393 ) 

110010 


SHEFFIELD 


8 H C^§5l RCJ * ,,A W“ 

Bpfij® 1 ' Sheffield. 86 

Hetuilred ror January, 1983 . 
■ Hoad Teacher for this 

modelled 

SnS ’nea^' 'reappiy?* 1 ** ara d 

furlB?; ,0 3y53i. J?e rm .-v.,,A^ 


& h " r #^ R ,-" ra saes 

w& }SeT%To^ V,, b5 n, r^ 


M tt ( S % a sr iday “Vow* 


8T. HELENS 
EDUCATION COMMITTEE 

* L fefiwn«hr v 

Required Tar. 1 st 
September, 1983 or es 
soon as possible ihare- 
after. 

Further details and ap- 
I nlfoatlnn farms are avail- - 


' Pi 1 . 0 "tip n " farraeare avall- 
|hle Worn The Director nr 
Education, Education De> 
partment. Century Heusi, 
Hsrdahaw . Street, si. 
HeJens. Mersey if da WAIO 
1 RN. A stamped, addree- 
sad rpolBcnp envelope re- 
quired In all egaas. 

Completed, nppjlca Eton's 
should be returned ta the 
Rev., Father A- McKay, 5 t. 
Josephs ■ Presbyt 
Rond,- Pep ley ( 

K*m% i til 


anouia _ 

S lav.. Fit 
□sophs 
ood,' I 


applications 
urned ta the 
. McKay, St. 


S 0UNTY M,DDLE 


” HF*ri 

'«aJ2SS R .«¥' (red September 18B2 or es soon as 
; ^2 , }^ r0aftBr tor inis Group 8 Middle School for pupils aged 

^&n& Ua, y 1903 > 381 ■ 

I 211.O22-E12.120 p.a. 

. form and further deteile for these post* 




BppHcailons snould be returned not later lhan 4 . 



WEST SUSSEX 
FIR"J H S ^y^ L COUNTY 

93 z lhCl * BP0, ■ PQ *WOrth. 01728 

RE-ADVERTIBEMENT 
lV 8 < roqu 7 red r,ou “ e ‘•"■vRlftbfc 

'SSHUSK 

Cj,lchn”“ar.' 

WILTSHIRE 

E iRij^LP E A N C OF C 

S*Ssr « E|P "- * ' SCH001 - 

gtO.R. fs 

^ V«k™s». r *- i,r * d 

ffi*.“?iL*s£“T~S-^ 0 c Vp 
110010 

WILTSHIRE 
sambourne c.e. 
Bcff 3 gg UED ^niMARY 

Sjhsup t0 *"' W,lt *' ®A 13 BLF 

KaSaR-Drwa- 

jVm^ry^l^aV. r *’ 1,u|r » d tar 
or A Xt^fi l B loh , s a i'V’ nd f urt| ': 

E ,n VrT JGS 

WIBHAI, 

no WS75,? o° L Wmn AL 

T ,D ” S , fcToVl"F*''T 

BLD 

September? |B 8 f l, r ar 

Boon B ■ nn.-IVi,. 1 “ B 


AVON COUNTY 

J»B 3 Deputy Heed (Group i), 

solios*i ,, tn lJ i M,,B person la 
u “ responsible for 

lUrntfUJum dBVaiuDmnfi r 

stnfe U m^ri.i h r ■•'hool. Please 
!.i!P Bfi ipl Interest*. 

1 1 )?/_ eppUcetJon to the 

roturnnblD Im- 

33 a tv-sss? « 

v«& B nnnt 


barking 

LONDON B 
BARKING , 

m™-' 


AKkllln B P 5 S 9 U OK OF 
Ifl.R.RJNO AND DAOSNI 


LIAM BEIXauv •S* RAM 

HfWWW4ftMVfR B .i 


Esse* nd “ D"Benhnm, 

DR1JH Asm Scale, proup 


rsEEn^s; 

Ahjn^S. 5JS5UbR“fc 




aSaysj.s^-avsm 

M^snyVcKf, 1 - 

Sly C C, P 'V‘“-- ’ T? 

miwk- 7t, ‘ jun "- M m 


Deputy Headships 
Second Masters/ 
Mistresses 

DEVON 

g«y" rM — 

11 0013 


fnS k JSSfa.^in > . tSl??9°, h "“^ 

i loots 


BARNET 

barSet aOROU OJI OF 

|gis.;r i ° r 


Burlington Rise, 

Bsrfr^te 4 hn * 

Deputy Hood Tea 


E«Bt Darrel. 


Peputy Hood Teacher. Group 

k»^s , w",J"1k;£!.T5 7:?mb£ 

fffr ■;? 

£f-"VL*. and **Persilon alio-' 


tSR LSfeaiDn^H 

110013 


EAST SUSSEX COUNTY COUNCIL 

a PP roved tor Ihe reorganisation 
. of schools in the Brighton and Hove Brea on tfw basle of 

£££ %TZ^Z,f u ^ on ■ l 1,+ «■£ “ «2 

HEADSHIPS 

West Hove Middle School 
Portland Road, Hove BN3 5JA 

2 ,hte Group 8 M,ddk * requlwt due 

to retirement of present poslholder In September* 

Saltdean Middle School 

School Lane, Saltdean, Brighton 8N2 6HB 

SSSS?,*t, on, !lS rou P. 4 MltWI S Sch0 ° l 'Ml^ad bon, 

St Andrew’s CE (Aided) FlraVMiddle School 
. Monmouth Street, Hove BN3 3YT 

wejjwitod from practising communfcani . 
nwmbere of the Church qf Ehglend for the Headship of 
JJJ® ® rou P 8 School, from January 1083 or earlier H 

St Bemedetfe’a RC (Aided) 

Flrat/MIddle School, Preston Road 
Brighton BN1 BUT. 

' Require^ Japuary ;i083, Headleaoher of ihfa Gwp 4 ' 
school, due to-, retirement of the present poslhoWef 
Practising Roman CalhoNo preferred. 

DEPUTY 

HEADSHIP 

Coombe Road Flra^MIddle School ; 

Coombe Road, Brighton BN2 4 £d 
Required for September 1 982, H possible, Deputy Head of 
tills group 0 school, to take reeponslblRiy primarily for the l 
day-to-day running ol (he First School. Candidates should 

lha 01 1 

Rslooatlon gram scheme available In approved oeeee. 
Application, forme and.ftiriHer details < w p| M M) 
horn: The.- County Education Officer, (Ref, PW). 
fiduoatfon Department, County Hall, St Anne'S- 
^©•“nt’.Lawae BN7 18Q. Completed forma Should 
be returned ae Indfoated In me detalfa supplied. 

Cloalng data for all poata; 4th June, tW 2 L 




;• -.1 1 
!•" 1 . 

•if v 

' i: ij ’ f 1 


il 

V,-id 

• :-u 

i -4 




L • ^1 * . * 























•I ■ 1 •, 

i ; 

l" 


! i 

i» r -I > ' : 


■14 i ;■ 


PRIMARY DEPUTY HEADS 

continued 

BRENT 

LONDON DO ROUGH Of 
BRENT 

BT. MARY'S HR INI- ANTH 
SCHOOL 

Canterbury Hoad, NWS 
(Roll 270 plus 20 Nursery. 
Social Priority Si-hiiul) 
Required for Svplrmbor. m- 
periedcnj Caihollr Infant 
TBm'iiffp ror the pom nr riE- 

PUTY HEAD ((iruup 3 1 u« 
tills 3 form entry upnli tiluii* 


■M*.\ 

f: 1 4i . 

« !■ -• > l 


nod school, imrt of ilix- nciiuol 
Is accnni mods toil In nil annex. 
Vacancy duo to retirement. 
London Allowance of £ 75 « 
per annum is payable. Brent 
la fundamentally rum ml t led to 
niulll. cultural education. 

ArjtLlcatiini rnrni mid fnrth' 
er antllh (SAL) obtainable 
from Director uf Etlnrntlun. 
P.O. Box I, ClutuliTlIrm 
Hours. 9 Purk Lane. Wi-iiiD- 
ley. IIA 9 ?RW tn fail rntni'iioil 
ta Rsv. F. Murray. Clialrttxait 
of Governors. Church of the 
Sacred Heart, CJuex Road. 
NWfi by 4 tli June. I 9 B 3 . 
(334901 lioaia 


BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 

B IILTON KEYNES DIVISION 
OLNE CHASE COUNTY 
COMBINE!! SCHOOL 
BuckJnBlium iliiiiil, Uleli hlny. 
Milton Keytinn 

AppllcstlcmH ure iiivitcil fur 
the pus l of Deputy Hoad* 
teacher. Group 3 . from r«- 
perlencml entli us La stir 

teachers fur this nimbi und 
School entering for pupils 
no ad from 3 to 12 , yaar*. Tlio 
□oat will ba aval In tile from 
September 1982 or January 

Assistance with removal ex- 
panse! and ranted housing 
may be available in approved 
cases and there is ■ wide 
range of housing to buy In the 
area. 

Appilcatan forms and furth- 
er detatla available from. 

i .M.H- Parke M A , Education 
(fleer. Milton key nee Divi- 
sion, Waiver ton . . House, 
streftford Road. Wolverton 
Mill, Milton Keynes MKD 
SNY on receipt of a foolscap 
HHItf oddressod 


CALDERDALE 

METROPOLITAN BOROUGH 
COUNCIL 

EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
BT, JOSEPH’S RC (Al J A I 

Prospect Street. Halifax HX 3 
fiLA 

Required from August 1982 B 
well qualiriad and experienced 
Roman Catholic tonchor fur 


the DEPUTY HEADSHIP ‘of 
this Group 4 school, to teach 
4 th year Juniors anu to share 
responsibility far Um dav a lup- 


in ent of curriculum and orga- 
nisation- The ability tu offer 
music would be an advantage. 


Application forma anil 
further detnlls ulitulnnbla fun 
receipt. of foolnian i.a.n.l 
from tlm chief EUin-ntlun 

S Lrflter, NurthgatQ.. Hiiuiin, 
Forliigste. ifallfaK (IX 1 I UN. 
Completed forma vhuulil lie 
returned tu Pother 11 little, 
flern art's Pi-esbytary. Itnmio 

km: (WUttr w s 


«! ‘.t - 

a? 

mMv - 

‘ ' i \ 


of foolntan i.a.n.l 
tlm chief EdiM-nilun 

it«.%?i l rS" t 1ix i iTin : 


iMinr 


0 LOU CEB’ CKR SHIRE 
figfflfMMAsn JUNIOa ' 

Nawent. ' ■ ■ 

SFo on roil. „ . 


. a on roll. 

Required from September < I r 
possible) Deputy 'Heed 
teacher. Qtwm S. Naw school 
to open boptenibar 108 4 . -Ex* 
aollent opportunity. 

Further partlauiers from 

ttv.a.nttn»r r mm 


BRENT 

oonouoil oi- 


BlVtW jssaw r. • 

PrSPiMSH-'R J? in l * vo otiipra 
JSLjehjno a nvely group ,ur Top- 
Innijti.. AnplieHnii should uo 
.wflllnii to became involved in 
fSWlwlB 1 ". atrunture and 



:wu(lnu to li 
.curriculum 

.ougssm&ntH 


opbratlan with stiff would bn 

e*psptoU-,e specially with pi m« 
tl-miltUrnl education. 


GLOUCESTKHSHHtli 
COAL WAY INI- ANTS . 
CDi.lHv.iv. Nr. I lull 1 1 Hill 
135 ml rul I. v , ... 

I It- inn j- li.-, i>t (irime A. suit, 
ubiy oii.il 1 1 toil ami «-«iH*ri'-)>' x-.l 
In (mil Trarlix-r i-rqnlri-d who 
Will bn 'itprrlail Co ilinrn rr- 
eimtialblllty (or »iru«nl'iiU"iiv 
slid ciirrli-uluni ilex nl.tiiiiu-iit . 

Apply to lliiadtt'ui'liiir ual- 
inn aiiorini Iiiimit*! Uiml'in* 
SAKl (AH 937 I llilOI'J 


NEWIIAM 

LONDON IIUROI'OII ill 
NEWHAM 

-ST HELEN'S II. C. BCHOpl. 
Fslrull fili-i-.it, l.iimliHi KI 3 
aim 

Rend Timelier: Bister Mnrv 
Mtirtanli 

Number riill: 298 + >11 


f lare n Mrs n ry 
IliPUTY UTAH TlxACHFH 
arnuii 6 

Requli-nl: H»|ili-nibi>r. 1982 - 

or ns sunn ae puasllile lliere- 
after. 

Applli’urila niiisl bn lunuiiM- 
tad Cutlixillc-x, nnd hnld n 
Cut ho llu’ Teachers Cnrtl fh'iilo. 
or Ita equivalent . 

PraviuiiH npnHuiib will be 
considered. 

Lontlun Allnwaiice: £759 

plus Social Priority Allo- 
wance. 

A ppll.'ut luii fnrnis/furllirr 
piirtlcuinr-i ffs.u.r plunne) 
uvailnblu (mm Til" Dlrm-ltir 
til CrluinMiiii. f.diii ill lull 
Of (lies, Ur uml way, SI rat turtl, 
I.nuclmi Kl .1 4 IIH. t*. inn iili'i ml 
In rum ilnnilil In- i-i'iuriird 
the ChAlrmnii i»r <Si»vi-rimr», 
Si Muruarai ■ u l.'onvi-ni 
netbell Avenue. Lon'lun E 16 
4 jU. bV 1 st Jude. 1 082 . 
(393391 I 10012 


NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

DAVENTRY SOUTHBROOK 
JUNIOn SCHOOL 
tHatvka Road, Soutlibraok 
Eat ate Do von try Northands 

APPOINTMENT OF DEPUTY 
HEAD CROUP tt. 

SEPTEMBER 1983 . Enthusias- 
tic and BXperlanrad teachers 
With tha ability to lead and 
cake responsibility are Invited 
tu apply for (lie above post. 

Closing data Juno I ltd. 

_ Details anil application 
farms U.S.e.l available Irani 
tha County Eduratlan Officer 
«Ref. Mill. Northampton, 
NNI 2 HX. (380321 llOOld 


SHEFFIELD 

CITY OF SHEFFIELD 


EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
ANGRAM BANK NURSERY 
INFANT SCHOOL, 


Kinsey Rand, Sliatfinld. SSO 
4 NH 

required ror Baptnmber. 1983 
a Deputy Headteacher (Oruup 
4 ). 

Appllcallon forms and 
flirtnei- details arc avnllnbo 
from ilia Chlnf Eduruilon 


6T. HELEN B 
EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
DEPUTY HEAD TEACHER 

..Raqulred 1 st s apt amber, 
1983 nr as soon as nofil- 
bln tlini'artrtar. 

urtliur Uolails and id 
- -^ on forms_nro avail 

asiVcte. ^s^Effir-nS' 
nSr&RSb.. c ”Ba!Rr«."“v«-. 

fin Ions, Mm-seysTiio WAI 0 
lRN, A Stamped, nnvaldpo 
cases. 


aliuuld ' bo rntnri 
Wav. Path nr Walker 
Tharesus l*rqsb 
oils Lane, But 

110018 


' SUNDERLAND 


. ‘ WitEon. Al Iowan co or £730 

ef,;3ssw,irgr£i!i,,K“K 


‘ AD TEACH DR 

' gHfiUfc^n 1 “CHOOL 

■ DEPUTY HEADTBACHE 
A P r»l i cp 1 1 onf or ms oota 
ram tho Dir sc lor or 
n. Town Hall nnd 
ntrh, . sundtirliindi 


WKHT SUSSKX 

SI MAHV'h IM„ Villi II 
PIUMAllY SI lllllH. 

Ni< nil ,i ii.lv, IliirslMiu, IV 
Smsi-i, ltll I *2 l II 
■<i-.iuir'--l ,l'iu"iirx I 'UI 3 lil - 
I'lliv Hi; \I 1 I I Al 'III. II I'll- 
tills <ir.Mi|> .1 ‘"■In, i,l In lu|,i< 
lit I ,llit i-l.ii*. -VUlilli aiii*. 

should In- i Miillliiiuli -iiit iii.'iii- 
liurs iif III" C.lini-i-li nf Lli'l- 
l.llld. Mil-.li-.tl u lillli v w nnlil In- 
mi ailvn (I lull.' 

Fnrms A fnrthnr ilrtalli Inmi 
lie aril oni her nil lurnlixl of x.o.o. 
L'liXlnji ilntn I I til .IiillO. IIIR 2 . 
1393031 I 10012 

WILTSHIRE 

Ai.iuinuitNi:. sr 

MIC IIAI'.I ‘s C.I.. Al I ll.l l 

sxiiimi. 

Mitrlliiu-iMiuli. ,'Nll 2111 * 

(■riiiili 3 N .11 It. 13.1 
llrpiilx 1 1 -ml i-,-i|ii(i'o,| mi 
SeiiloiilbiM-. | 9 H 3 . 

IVrliieit Ini tors ol •iiMilli-a- 
llini to Im mill in tlin lionii 
Toni-hor. Mini Iiiii ini", ulvlini 
liiii'tli-iilsrn nl oillli ntlmi. 
I|-.xlulii<) mul (-xiinriiixt r ixixil 
nlnil tlm iiniiii-H mill nililrnssi-i 
uf Ixvn rnfni-crs hv I'piurii uf 
li«»nt. (53021 | I 10012 

WILTSHIRE 

MINSTEH C.I-:. 

CONTROLLED J. A I. 
SCHOOL 
3 Vtrnraiie Hirci't, 

WarinliiHirr, HA 12 Hit; 
CilKIUI" 4 
N D.ll. Ift'l 

fi-'inil v I l.'ii.l ri-'iuli'nil ft mu 
hi uiitii-v I IIH 3 . 

a t>ii I I i-li i inn i in-in mill niriii- 
»r imtnlln 1.9 Al: illniiNrl Irmil 
and ml uni able tu (lie llnail 
Tnaf-linr by lull Jiuin, 1982 . 
133303 ) 110012 


Heads af Department 


NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

NORTHAMPTON HIGH 
SCHOOL 

Darngnie. NorjMainpton 
Toll ( 0604 ) 3 B 095 

Wall nunllflad nnd ox- 
perlancdtl TEACHER xvltll 
Vlaluu and enorgy ronulrnd 
fur. Daplomhar ur Janunry 
to tnke rharue or tlin Low- 
er School. 

Tlm pud iuvtilves tile 
or (tail I sat Inn uud Uav lu 
■lav runpliifl <>f tail rlassns, 
aim rnu (jo 3 tn 9 yaarfl. 
with ultimate respansbllliy 
to Ills Head mist rasa or the 
High Srhcal. s Churrli of 
England Inrinpandent 

school for 7 B 0 girls aged 3 
tu IB. Whlla being re- 
sponsible fdr ana or tha 
top cl asses tha parson 
appointed will hsvn time 
allucatoii for administra- 
tion. 

Burnham salary. stain 
according to quallriratlans 
and axperlonra. 

Apply m on™ with i ur- 
rl rul u 111 vlinn and iiiiiimn uf 
rnferuaa to tlm IfaadmlB- 
trnns. <480371 110018 


Seals l Posts and above 


AVON 


COUNTY OF AVON 

«^miT«tMAUY 

Pulionoy ILoad. Jlalli BA 9 4 UK 
Hnnul r,, i| from fleptember Jet. 
L 0 B 2 , full-tlmo Infant 

Toacliar, Hcala a. Ability to 
take rasp unsl Ulllty fur urau- 

J ilnutlnn for Inranis A Lower 
luii tun, nnd alsu tu cuntri- 
•ute tu dbvqlniiiiiAiit or all 
uveas of nurrlctiUim . Ability 
tn piny tho pi nn o a n ndvaii- 


tago. 

Vrurti 1st Baplnnilmr, 1089 , 
nil-time Infant _ -rancher, 
Itnlo 1 . Capa bid ur nontrlbut- 
lug fully to tlm tutal nruoraiii- 
nn uf iiirant work, end bring- 
iiu a nnrlna, cnuinilltnil, llvn- 
y lyitUiutlasua dimnnstuij tn 

M arhinii an Infant Class. 

lisle an ndvnntaun. 

, A pji I Icon Is must bn pnurtls. 
hill ituniBii Cniliullrs. 

. Anpliintlmts wttbuiit dalny 
by launr tu the Hnadtiiuriinr 

P lvino itaRias siiiJ JUyr"£J*JB Jij 
wo i-nferiips. (386901 llQOflO 

BARKING 



I NORFOLK I 


cAMmumiKHtimK 

• AMIIIItni.l A 111 \ 

Nl tVIIAM « 'ICt *1 1 i lll’MI 
i'll 1 1 X 1 A It V til linni 

1 .1111 Ml Ill'll- 

\i'iill'-.ii It. ill 'in* nix iii*il l**r t 

-«1 ' 111 ' 2 Ill'll In ||||| ll .1 I it "I « 1 1 
l ll ( > 11 1 < i -■ I tilt .ml , lilix .ni'l l.tf '• 
(•"•lullllltllltlx (ill- I* I . Ill I I II- 
S' ll'll'l 

tl'l'lli 'll I"|| I nr in* I 

Si- no ir itri'ii Cilii' 'limn Hill' • 

■ •I'. Slllri- Hull. 1 . 111 X 1 ■ 1 Ill'll- 

t'll .1 «.\l* X 1 . »X.l* I'lrflXV X Vf • 

tiirn.iblii li x 2 imI Iiiiii- 
i J .I.VIn) l | mi. -n 

DORSET' 

UI- 1 'ON INI ANTS si |(imi|. 
(illl-tl Itn. 1 , 1 , I l|lt ■ III I'll. ill- 
( il'in I'liiur ."I ■ 7 I 

lt>''|llll''-il Sl-|l)i-llllK'i . I > 111.1 
Nnl liilil v •iiinllllnl ■ liix-i 

(I- >li luir xx llli ■‘«x|i>iiiillilll(x 

fill- I .llllliumil' llox ■- I "IXI 1 H- II I 

Hi Mi. 4 . 

Allplli'n ■!»■• Ini Ilia .in -1 
furlfidr ildulli frmn ■ In- ll<-iiit • 
mlsli-i-is mi ira-t-liii nl i«r 
t.lliflHM l HlilHii 

EAST SUSSEX 

ctil'NTY trniiNcTi. 

VVIIlTC.lt A WK I lltsr St until. 

VV ll lie Im xvk Itniiit, llrlxlilnn 
UN 2 3 FI. 

L'.Kpnrlnnrcit Nnrsrrv Tru. iirr 
rnnuirod rruni h->pl--mhr<i . 
l Sr air 2 TV. KTA atloxvniui' > 
In Im ■'•>it|ii ins I lilc fur n ixxn- 

■-laii xx|xr-n iUiiii No I.'iiii 

•-"mi ■ r I xiii-i In iiil'llll'iu in i in s 
|ix)il , -itirxt ln-i fxlll-llllir- 

ti-li' lMT ,iil(l ixxai iiiii-" i i 
■inrun, t'tlll'llilnm '.lii'iil'l lii- 
iir»iuiriKl m xvnrk ni n ••-.uu 
mill nlxii ln'l|i In tl'iilil NN I. II 
ntmtcixti. lli'linnUun urnM 
nrlii-mi' avnllublr in npiirux nl 
i-usax. 

ApolKatlou fnriiiv n-niii 
Cnuiiiy Kriututmi) DllHi-r 
(liar. 1 *W), LllinutllMl Dniuirl- 
niaiit , County Hull. SI . 
Anna's Ci-mu-ont. I.iixvi'h 11 N 7 
ISO (H-A.E. plmixol, In hr 
returdad to ilia llRadtrarliur 
at the achonl US SIIIIII in 
Possible ■ (3303 t > 1 1 U 0 2 U 

EAST SUSSEX 
COUNTY COUNCIL 
SILVER DALE COUNTY 
PRIMARY SCHOOL 
Pflflli Uoail, St. LeuiinrilH-un* 
Son.. TN 37 7 F.A 
I ll r>l 1 : 464 ) 

RBiinlrnd Snptomfanr. H 1 H 2 . 
Hoad uf Infants. Stair 3 . I'.x- 
prrtml''D(l trailior nr liifnnis 
wall able lu land n ilti|inrt- 
mnilt. l.T.A. IS III tin- |M ill rii 
uf boliip plidsod nui. t'lmi- 
varUcal aruuplnn. 

Ilalocatlon grants nvallnlih' 
til approved tain*. 

Application Ttirms Is.n.r . 
plnaso) from tlm County 
Education Officer. Education 
Department, County Hall, S(. 
Anne's Crescent. Lewes IIN 7 
16 G and returnable to Hnatl- 
muntar by 4 th Juno. (330331 

11 0030 

HARROW 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
GRANGE Finb'T 8 CIIOOL 
Wr.lbcuk Road, Horriiw. 
Middlnsox. it A 3 OHJ. 

Tut: 01-422 11034 . 

Hoquirnil fur haplniiibnr 19113 , 

f aspnrlencad <-111x4 tratlmc 
or inusli. thraiiiilioiit 1H11 
firhuul. It In ansnutlal (uf 
Candltlutaa to liuvu nit ciiHni- 
Alastlc appruQch Ui inmlnril 


tha Middle Huliuul. teaching 
Maths, and ganarni suhlni-in. 
An ability to help with buys 
BMIU OV Still lu VtBXInt Blltl 
would bn ait ndvniitaun. 

. Plnaso apply by Inttni- an- 
al using curriculum vitae ami 
iiamaa and ntltlrsesna of iwu 


an bs rSBpoiisiblo for 


Vn*-. ^ : V;- 

1 r ^ “ 8pr<^tbftC6uhtyf Irst ^phioot ; ■; - t ;! 

\ •. Notviich,(0roup4) r s -. *, ■•-{v 

•;!. :-.v vVwui^dior/- ; 

jNlldcl ; )' % 

/. :■ Noft»loh(Qroup6);; 

;• i-ri ■ A^lafiijusin 1 <qri]i««i Vtelal* tor . ihiio '-(tcmTC. fiv» C 
' t . w.&juo^n.Offleer, CjwVfti Kai, Norwich NBi aptiifL rw^pi of ■ 

^:^?: : : OEI?P^MHEAb : '' : ' : li;!, 

■ : yi 


tics and Sclonco 
out tha school.. .. 

• a.arsnoq will ba give 
' applicants who ara comm 
" Christians _ and com 
meinb 
gland, 

„ London Addition £739 a. a, 
Ralmbursamant or removal 
expanses in approved ossa 
r _ Application forms aval' 

1 from _ and ta bs raturnsq.co 
■■ 

H 4 > Bark. (Ho, Essex, byjflrst - 

~ l,.’ 

BUCKINGHAMSHIRE ; - 


nrhuul. It la ansnutlal (ur 
Canrtldutaa tn liuvu mi riiiiiii- 
Slastlc appruach til muilnnl 
teaching itinthruls and nil alni- 
Ity tu play Ilia pimm . 

. Application forma from and 
to ba raturabd tu ■ He ad la sell nr 
by 1 1 Ml June. Plnnan niirluua 

fiw«y BddroaBBt1 

HARROW 

nitlMNDYKf! M It NT AND 

MIDDLE SCHOOL 

Scale B Maths Cu-urdlnntni' lit 
wurk with n tasni thi-niigliuut 
tho Middle Huliuul, teaching 
Maths, and aanernl siihlri'is. 
An ability to hulp with buys 
gamos or sudlu vtsxint aids 
would bn ait ndvniitaun. 

. Plnaso apply by Inttni- (in- 
closing curriculum viton ami 
namos ami ndtlressns of Iwu 
.rnfei-ooit by -Jiatii May, Pious" 
onclune stpmncU nUrirnHsnil 
ClIVnloDn. (383481 ! IJIOltl) 

KIRKUQB 8 

“ rtphmolu ‘ w,ko 

hor - Niu-SHry llnll • 
1 «. 

. Put further details ane 

^ ur,ory HoA 

NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

WH88C”' 

ColloatL str aet , 
IrtnllnaborouQh 

Enthusiastic and comnilt- 
ted tnacher regulrod ror a 
Scale 3 post from 6 aptnm- 
bar In this junloi' sohoul 
With a growing raputatlcin, 
Thin, le a son lor post Id 
which s large moasura or 
. general responsibility (a 
attached. Exporlnnco and 
Interest 'in Maths and/or 
Science 
advantage 

. Closing data - June 7 th.' 


grf’l&'fi'liSlr c ® 

MHi, Northampton House, 

m&i r ton ’ ^ 1 ® 


with ah.Tbietf 
■ j >Mntnernstla jb 


Seala 1 Posts, 

^ . ■ i 

BUCKIN'GHAM$HIRE 

MILTON KEYNE 8 bi vtb 


' SLW? ar » Q „ ranted- --housing 
’i' arsSf . W m the 




AS ftp;; - 

letalilsV, ' 


I IIK I IMES FlH r ( 


I'AMHlllDliKBltlUK 

III NflNi.ltON Mil A 
If ‘ *1 '.III"*. I lll'M 1 
i 1 ii i m.x ii v hi mu ii 
ttxiigli I "■> . Iln lit l ii, lit, an. 

■ IX 111 1 1 H 

lie, |>lll l-tl f.,r Xriilrmliri . 
I-III.I »• M>r ■ • r- ii, ..,| ln.i.|||.,- |,-l 
l |>i(i|,'ti ii.tlf 1 1 in. 

I Ml AUilli'. 1 l«xi„ | Anti 

ll'lix’ l ■ .liur x .1 n ,1 I . x iiiii, loll, 

-■\|i|i|l> ntt.'Ui l'» Ir Iff r>i 

ill, -n I'l I'r.ii |t ill,. I|nn,||iini«,'i 
l.x ,! 4 tli Mb nl'M" 

• llxr l'-l r-|llliiff|r i|iii,il,r>i xxhi-l,- 
x- 'ii '.in I". « .'iil.ii |n, | i.YiM'i, 

Ill'll . 14 

DEVON 

I'lrsm n-i- 'llilihi Mil* prll.ninnixt 

• »l I'lXIln A 3 , i.l'is | ■)■ 1111 ( 1.(4 


ATIDNAI. SUPPLEMENT ILU, 

WiddlMahoJP^ 

Education 


DORSET 

-.1 maid x i i 

A. Yl? Mil IM 1 5 '** |,>UMAHV 
llr.ulf"i ■■ Aliliai. Ni 
Hlli.r I".,"" Ilt'l mill 
(■■■ll Ill'll 

II- '|,ilr«-il Xr|i|riii|„T | r >■■ liri 

I *4i *lln I I, fail i Iftqq uf l’|i|>rr 
liilnnii xxlin i>, m- 1'ixxri 
.1 llllll ll*i ■ I 1 1 nlm llnlr 111 . iiu 

i iirrl< iilluii lillrrnili 

llllllinr i Inin iji aiu| npiilltn- 

• l<'ll fuff ,i> ,'i n n iiiii. nr-l ||i, ,|| 

I I n ,i, 1 in ,ff1|p| 

Nil \ |,|'l |r g 1 1 , ii|i nrn |*m. 
tiliiml li, 4 nll-iijc | n nx n 1 1 ami 
1 uni Im I a Hill r in |,li ,x n,| |,,i- 

1-lHn l>, r nalili- 

tlm Aur I ■"•r itv lu ■ »mniv xxim 
tlin I rl|'l li r, |m "li ,,( i|, r ( al |, 

III- lriur -ll linllm fur Dir |ir,-- 

■•"iii i'iixi fi,,|ilrr. | 433 ')|I 

I lAu'Ji 


DORSET 

ST. JOSEPH'S it. 

COMIIINI'II hUIIOOI. 

Nrxvltn Wny. 1 ‘arkilimr. 

I’miln 

(232 un mil. >mr roti'jff- 3-121 
llff-ffliili ff-ffl Si-ntff-iniM-i-. I «J 82 . 

i Ini Hi IiiiiiI Iralnnl tnx' lirr 
Inilijinrir* fur unr vnnr. s»nlr 
I . Prm lliliiu C.alliffillc rufftii. 
(Iill. 

.. Anplirntlon fur mi rmin iim 
Ilradteai linr mi in i-n,t „i 
S.n e. 1 4 .33 H ft I 110022 


iii,'.i%i — - 

" ill It n i l,h"|,. EAl.INfl 

I n,| • 33 3 | • ‘ ,,lnU 

'■ ' hOltoUOH OF 

•ii 1 , rVi , i , i , » ‘ »?f! r v Jf • 

“riViiDL 1 1 h MfmjLE 

rt'li nr 1 1 ini, in nt Dlilllff-l.l t.dnffi Ho„,h 

V ... "-“’i liKi-V Uf - "®eu 

i&iavTapjw. 

■"iiillili- |KU a . r W r » 

FHIMAHV l,,';.V,V, , , l, Alli ( w. U n? fl P,u « 

rr.*M «■ " P * n r Ih *■'? «?«> 

or GDV »NKWt, IM 

h«T I r.i. Iln M|\l'Unin x V *Yj B 6 * 9mf M ? ,art ' 

.".srr 

•nnir iii .it ii — — laaitu 

"am. ann.l.a- , HUMBERBIDB 

• |i"iir - 1 1 1 "III I.Dl't./VTION COMMITTEE 

ii|i nn* r>x- MAHsIIIANM MIDDLE 

1 run, ami M „ .. SLllffOL UUtt 

n I' m ■% n,i i<,r llnll Itnad, (juoli, SOuiA 

in nnaUlff- Htiinhenlde 

■ If Uu- i„l, N.fl.ll. 372 . (1 roup 5 , As, 

rKr^^Dir in-,.. range 9-13 

LlD ' hs ^ i . ifla 3 , : ,, it l EAn. ,op inua "' 

A null ration formi ud 
f i< r 1 1 1 ii r parileulsri abttjn. 
Rt*J« from the Director of 

nn 

kit unr-, F.«i. 3116 ta whom con- 

_ , united forme ehauld be h> 


..rued not leier then Frl- 
rioy^. 4 th June, J 9 SJ. 
139014 1 190010 


EAST SUSSEX 

CIHJNTV CDUNI.IL 
ST. THOMAS A IIEC.'KF.T 
It.r. lAIIILill INFANTS 
SGllOUJ. 

lillli Darn Laiin. Lastljuurnp 

UN 22 8 XT 

(Hull I an i 

Required farglnmliFr 1982 . ox- 

B ar enroll . junior Tneiiinr, 
tale I. uble tu oTfrir fllrlx' 
Games nnil Itollglims Ineirui- 
lion. Prai tiling CathulM: pro. 
lorruit . 

Itrlurnl luii iimuta gvixiialiln 
in ri|ipriivr«l i nuns. 

Aniiili'ailiiu furins le n n. 
■Ilff-nan) fi-iiiil llir- _ rqnnily 
Lit licet Ion Orthier, L«tm nllmi 


WSSSSSSn ' 'i'." liv e mplivir. (44 


Deusrimeni. f-Miinty Hall. S| 
Anne's t.rreinit. I.evves IIN/ 
I Nt i ami I'eiurnsble n> A'ling 
!li« (till tiled- ff*ii llV 4 lti Julio 
( 391134 1 1 1 1102 ,1 


HILLINGDON 


LONDON IKIItOI (fill 1)1 
Hillingdon 


Deputy Headships 
Second Masters/ 
Mistresses 

BERKSHIRE 

bT KTHELDEnT ‘8 RC „ 
(AIDED l MIDDLE SCHOOL 
Wreliixnt KoaiX, Slaugh 
N.O.R. 223 

Prai IIbIiid Catholic, wide ede- 
• ailnnel nsperlenca reCuirxd 
Srpioniber 19 B 2 ee DEPUTY 
HI‘AnrCAqilEn lOroup 4 . 
H - 12 irlmol In modern »mJ- 
rauluiw-ii bulldlna an (an# 
m rnn Unit. Easy, quick acctts 
Hi l.oriilffiil. . . . . 

ApiiIy HoBilinseler, Slots* 
U 2 U 48 , (ur lurm ana hirthir 
lirtiille. Bsrfeshlra Cpun» 
Council is an «au«l 
itv i-iiinluyor. I 44367 J 190019 


llRIiAKHPFAH INFANT 
. HCtll mi. 

Uusliey HubiI . li-bx nils m. 

I ixbi'iilun, Middlnsnx I 111 1 D 

BJ A 

Hffi<](ii|-(ii 1 fxir Hninninlirr 
infill. Ail nntliiisiaeiiff 
t nnclmr. nrnfnrnljly Infant 
ami Nursm-y li-aiiiml, fin- 
Uw nursery, vmlx an in* 
llil-nst lu tlm illiinff-ry soil 
liiWcr end ur ||in Infmil 
Nffiliiiul. PiiiNllilliiy ii[ n 
Mrs I*, piiat In lli« fuluifi. 
Dutnt Ldlliltltl Allffxxvniire 
liny a bli-. 

Aniilluatldii furins frffiin 
Mm Dirm-iur ■*( r.ilniin luu. 
(Ijvlt- Ouiru. If xlirlilun . 
MIililx, I'l'elniilKiiie llx- 
lil'iilUn flU-IAUl l|l wlililll 
lh*l' xxli ii ii I il Im rnllii iinil ns 
sinni ns fiunmlilr . tM)*.t 4 Ut 


DORSET 

tit HlHLMDOIt MIDDLE 

.StJlitlOl. 

fcW.WT!Upr - r». b 

TSSSno V’ffiKSfi" «n»5. A 
« ,, x?. n . l .r rSs?r B0 « P e 3i®ft 

furl linr dflulls from 8 Uy'«> 
i)il|ffi-r- T.usl«rn Arse 
i f,ni Oifl'in, I'ni'imon 
KUliniuiid rtlll. "Wn<»SS& 
.,11 ri-tl'l|jt uf «■■■■' igiS 

MTAPFOniMHIIRK 


^!“l V.,,« 

nil S 3 “* -1 Vo, .m* end 

..flcyail Wigjgft 

sr •• •'•S irjss 

If “*«■ 


LONDON HW 7 
UuallHnd _nnd MiuTlfiinttl 
Assistant Misii-nee rruiilrfd In 
Hntiiainbar tfiH tu tnni.U u 
group nl 4 - 1 year ulds- 
Plensri qpnly In wrltinn en- 
nluslnn (.'. V. aiul tlin iiamim id 
two refernes tua Th" Hrnil- 

a ulstress, „ The Itnninshti**’ 
cliuii l . 63 Ennlaiiiijr<i (iw- 

dons. Lundoii »Wr . .OSU.t 


RICHMOND Ul'ON 

thambh 

■ v,Nr !M S^if NIon 

Th« Vtn^^, 8 Rtvliihond, 

Appllcaciuns ara liivltad 
P an unaatflblfsried post 

' ■ rmra 

bid stats interasts 
ha able to ufrer 
and Hoy*' dimee. 

Fbrms (foolscap a . s . 8 , } 
from Dlractgr or _Edbcs- 

3 dB, returnable ta ' tit* 

B oadmaStar at the school 

rial Juno- ( 88889 ) 

- -I I 10022 


in ilnslrsiilo rw of n 

nluynnx tu l>« «®g£ or "o njalb 

"vra 1010 rr °° iiMi» 


Remedial Posts 
Scale 1 Posts 


DORSET . 

novinoton comp. ’ T o fl dt?B , " ir i 

Ift^SIf^-SsSS- 

SSS' ffA-Pj-SSl.'KfM*' 


post requires ■ * ,j, to, , 

EdArSS.h'TStt'K. 

jijiff avgsg 

forms)- . end 


-WARWICK 


1 ia ,' r ; . m Ri " *■ “FW Y 


't ; ■ ■ • - vV'V ' ? 

J bUCKINQH AMS milH ; f ‘ • 

- j, i;. .rX 


games. 

panaqs 


las^ 


V - und 

a 


WJSM-C'^A'ffSV" 

be In rhsrne of a cjsqapf 4 
work l a 1 "' 1^3 

D.C.«: 8 u- 

paranriustipif. . . . . , . 

Anrtly , Ip writing, anclustAg. 
a qinTlirblUfU Yllsn. tugidher 
With lnafties, enure sue* and 


By Subleot ClaBsUlcatlQ" 


Eng lish 

Scale 2 Posts and 

M> I ‘ " ■ 

OXFORDSHIRE _ 

r-nn VTV flOUNC.lVne 




THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21 . 5.82 


HUDDLE SCHOOL 

continued 

Mathematics 

Heads of Department 

SUFFOLK 

flTOK B- B Y - N A Y L A N n 
MIDDLE SCHOOL 
Stohe-bf-Nayland. Nr. 

(i 3 l |*ed B doniprnhonslvu 9 - 13 : 
370 on roll). 

namilrad as soon as puxalbln. 
Head Of Mutliiiinaltx.-* and Hi 1 - 
ifico- (Sal* 8 ) 

" n Form» nnil rurthcr ilniullH 
available from llnHdtnurlini- m 
toe School, (e.u.o. jjlrnsoi. lu 

r„». vs 5 4 r fi 

Modern Languages 
Scale 1 Posts 


HERTFORDSHIRE 

CAMPIONS SCHOOL 
Stapleton Roail. Burohuin 
wood. 

(0.13 mlddln srlHinl). 

Requlrod for Soiitombor, livn- 
iy and cixtliualaiiUv toachor fur 
French [Benin 2). En Avium 
and Horl* Founilullrm ciiureni 
are taught throunhuut tlin 
four yearH. Altliaugh the aur- 
ctnliil cnmllrinb* will nlao bn 
exported to tnoch In oihor 
■ubiact arooa, thia in or Ida* 
Importance than the ability tu 
encourage a root interest In 
Preach. 

Further details may ba 
obtained from the Hoad. 
(39330) 195622 


KIRKLEES 

METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 
WHITECHAPEL MIDDLE 
SCHOOL , „ 

Whitechapel Road. 

Cleokhaaton 01)19 6 HR 
(REF. 6981 

Reaulratl (or 31 Auaujsl IOE 2 , 
Teacher, SCALE I, Tor 
FRENCH and General Subject" 
In tbli 0 - 13 middle school. 

Application lurms tn.u.f.e. 
please ) Trom the Hum) 
Teacher to whom c-uinplncnd 
forme must bo rnturnnd with- 
in 14 duya ol Ihla iintll-c In 
the praaa. ( 39479 ) 123622 

KIRKLEES 

METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 
KIRK BURTON MIDDLE 
SCHOOL 

Turnahawn Avnmii-. 

Klrkburtori. HurMliTBlIeld 
HD 8 0 TV| 

(ROf. 657 1 

Hag ill rod lor 3 1 st Annual. 
IBM t author «i( FRENCH. 
|CALE 1 . Thu Lu Avunl 
Schomo la nmii nnil runilllui-lty 
with thii niuiiirlnl xvuulil )»■, iiu 
advnninqc. Tin. nhliiiy lu r«»n- 
vor.xn fluvlllly In I i-i-m li lx 
tniontlal. Tlm pithiiii 
appoiniff'tl Xvmild In, f-xiini tr-il 
to touch Riiini' iii'n(-riif iiiii. 
Jeen n ii mcnilMii- nl u Yciir 
Group Toulli. 

Apptlrnl lun furins. is.u.l.n. 

S ilBDSO) Irinn -1 l Iiu Hr-uil 
olctinr. in wliniii riiiiiiiluincl 
orijix must In- ri-tui-niiil with- 
in 14 clay a u( Hits ,iuiU-«i In 
tha proas. > 59477 ) 123 ( 12 '.! 

SHROPSHIRE 
IPUCATION COM MITTLK 
School' ” M,,,ni ‘ l - 

Ij^ukaiiiii. -i-iiiinrxi. ns u. t , 
49-13 yrnars) 

Soehoi - 8 ,,r *' tun 

"Hf.Y.fJV™ ffind Nmii" sitf-- 

- Muni Itffffir 

another lntorunt arcii. With 
B1 “or PHuilfc- 

lii^in,n r , * ,r iinull* n tlun HI 

lleadmustr-r with h.A.If. 

( 44311 ) I Vt. 3 ff.U-J 


Scale 2 Posts and above 

WAIIWICKRIUHK 

STOc:K I ^ciroit,| midi i|. i: 

Wu"ti. S UM'k Intifc i r it , 
Niineutun. f:vt(l HJY. 

■l 9 lS ,, 1 il , S" U >■ p»W«o»*i«)r» 

isr-,. svi/ns;-! 
; -Sfci: ? «aasK ' thii 

P n Strain'?) 

•snibtfnMr u 

■_ !_• 123920 


Seals 1 Rosts 


iilY MIDDLE 


JfBnflwr a - pf w l iW cQ, ‘f | vg 


Other than by Subject 
Classification 

Scale 2 Pos ts and above 

HARROW 

t Jinx' tnteraat. a8,,u,nD Durr,cu - 

SVirS 1 " JpUSSMS 

Scale 1 Posts 


Ealing 

LONDON BOROUGH OF 

Osborne Road. Acton, 

Lomlun WS Ssj 

'“^Septembar clea- 

«S?1Eeo^liVc. 5P53C ,n 

gUJggJ"*- ” sa LondonAHo- 

frA?^6MU5T5 b‘e BA r?i 

turned by 4 June. ( 3 B 776 ) 

126629 

HARROW 

Arnnrtnt Drive. South 
Harrow. Mlddleaex. HAS 

TH: 0 I-B 64 3 S 46 
Toinpnrury Techer required 
fur i his open plan, team 
loiirh Inn, multi-racial school 
to caver mntarulty leave. Ap- 
pH co nr ■s rthould bu In aym* 
nnttiy xvtili the alms of a mul- 
ti-cultural school and have ox- 


f nrlnnrn and Interest In the 
-B years unr group. An abil- 
ity tn touch music and to 


avslst with middle schnol ox- 
iru •■ni-rlriiiar activities would 
tie mi ud vii ii tune. 

Appllr ul Km furins trom and 
id li« rnlurud to. Hand tauc her 
lu »• Hi . Juno. Please onctose 

^B.V.VSi 1 ""TS'ifiBfa 

HARROW . 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
WhLLDON PARK MIDDLE 
ht.iiom. 

tVyvf-iihuo Rnail. Buuth 
llurrovx'. Mldillusox HA 2 8 LS 
Ti'l U I >432 4304 
Hfiffliilri'il f ur Hnptrmhor to 
ittniiirnity leave, nn nn- 
tliuiiiiiHilr, oKiiprlnncBd class 
tnurlior wlm will nlitu hi- nblu 
tu Inkr ilnxrgg of Music 

i he Erliool, All 

u hllll y tu play the piano Is 
i-suriitliffl. 

A i ■ ill I in i Itiii lurms Irnm nnd 
lu bi- i uliii-iiiiil tu Ilnudliiachor 
hv 4 Hi .liiiiii . I'louic nnrlosn 
Niaui|ii-il uiiiiri-Hsnffi nnyelopa, 

1 3 83 . 1 . 1 ) 125622 

HARROW 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
VAUGHAN MIDDLE SCHOOL 
Vitiiiiliiin It, mil, Wuiit Harrow. 
MUIlilnxiiX. 

Till: ( 11-427 7222 

14 ><>lii I ml l<ir fii'iilnmlmr lor 
liiminirnry riiiilnu-l to iiovar 
MutffTiiilv Lnuvu. ii li-nrlirr uf . 
m>ni-rnt xulijui-b with a »p»- 
ff'lnlisi kniixvlnilni- in Uic 

f nilt-liiiiii nl Miislii. Ability in 


t ti iW'li jin: in Miislu. Ability in 
nl ii x 1 tlu< pi iino Is f-ssmitial- . 

A|i|>i|>Hlliiii fiirlil* uiul 
III rllipr ilul ii I Is from anil tn be 
■ f ? i n i-iii-i I tu lli'iiu iPui'liar by 
1 hli I I'li'au Miclosa 

•tt’SWV ""tSteGT* 


HIIROH8HIRE 

Ell Ilf : AT ION COMMITTEE 
IHtOtlKMIlE MIDDLE 
HI.-IIOOI- _ .. 


ilroukslili', Trlftird T 13 1 LO 
HOI) iiiinils if) -13 yours) 

Tl- At ‘.tltr.lt OF GENERAL 

Null. I III :TN lopiporiiry In the 
first iiistuiuo, uun to mntorni- 


berkshire 

kennet school 
ISWW- Thatcham Bark.. 
N.O.rT 707 S 

SlSS™ - . 


nl^rad January 1983 , 

Group fr CH S* - of .. thlB 

achoot. 11 eo '"ducatlonal 
ar | iV 1 fr n om r S, ,urth ' 

ci{ n |*' a B ea k ua h | lrB Cou, 1 t y" Coun- 

Ployer* ?§§ S \ 

BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 

COUNTY COUNtill 

SSaWScWl"' 

Sto-'gi.fy-i.ftij'-'-'i 

i 

aBrSTW-J-K-JSSKS 


KENT 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

P®adteacher 
of^LS AKS 8CHOOL for 

A®- Ro11 approx 800 ) 

fear^f 

jfal* Haadahlp orders an ex- 
for * n 

Si!? ®. i ond energetic person 
who Wishes to dovoloo and 
maintain the high standard of 
xJf£ p ! CH W flo Yo*opniant, pas- 
l OPB i» oduEotlonai and re- 

SUS^*ff h 88 fc WteKf and 

small Th “" 

Apphcatlon rorm and furth- 
•f . particulars from the DI- 
I'nidnn 1 Et, “ c “*lon orricer, 66 
Kent®" Ple^?. 6 Cl *onc? 0 Ve eftQ a ^i: 

ggg^fi - ,,th ,ite 


WARWICKSHIRE 

POLESWORTH SCHOOL 
portion, Tam worth, Starrs 
cpmDrMianilvo. 12 - 
IB. 1042 on roll Including 
85 in 6 th form) 

Appointment of HEAD 
KOUB II from January, 


Applications are invited 
far ttie above post which 
has rallen vacant due to 
the retirement of the pre- 
vious Road. Application 
form and further details 
ore available from the 
County Education orricer 
(ref SF/JT) 32 Northgate 
Stroot. Warwick CV 34 4 SR 
( 6 AE pfenee). ( 38110 ) 


Deputy Headships » 
Second Masters/ 
Mistresses 

DORSET 


SECONDARY SCHOOL 
Wimborno Road, Poole 
(Ca-qilucatlonel. age rant 
19 - le. numbar on roll 13 


HEAli 

(Group 12 ) to be rosponelblo 
for bays' welfare, xhd discl- 

C ilina, to Join the Heodmaa- 
ai-'e senior management team 
and to he rosPonalbie for spe- 
cific arena of administration 
Including external exfamina- 
llans end staff sUpel-viaOry 
dutlfia. _ . . . . , ■ 

Forma and Turthar detalle 
about the past and the school 
Trom the Headmaster pn re- 
ceipt of I.B.O. ( 40962 ) 130012 


SHROPSHIRE 

fSl U 0 C ^8 0 C N HS8^ M,TTEE 

SY^SEE 1 Ro “ d ' Shrewsbury. 

ir.ll!ll “ d k 4 Form entry 

R««ui «5 H 5 C ohenBlVB achool. 

M. «SSl'r Tho post involvoB 

in v,p P , ;;,,“’ s ,".;ra , vii!, , . y 

SrE"'®-.-,,"" '■"I'Sooj’a 


LEICESTERSHIRE 

wigsto^quthlaxton 

2 DB. 

LsitoxiarelilrB 
Plan Upper School and 
Community College: 

SENIOR TEACHER 

(ra-advertlsemenil 

Required August or 
A 57 J 57 * s . onlor Teacher/ 
“•rector or Studios. The 
D ff p f, on "Pnulnted to this 
5 ,««V e SS l .? B demaixdlnn 
oast will bn espacted to 
m B n* a m * lar ro,B *n senior 
menegemant. Oversight or 
a large number of thq 

and the davalopmont or 
coureea for Slxtli form or 

gte-- n a-,.?p^ ,M „n°d f 

sss S Bstu nk..ra 

{toj- Jot , «.nSfi“ 7 « kszi : 
tion nnd well formulated 
curriculum da. 

SuisPtea" 1 orn f,rflr °- 

Further details on re. 
quest (a. a. o.l. 

APPly . (no forms) with 
full particulars nnd names 
and addresses Of two re- 
To re os to the Principal. 
Previous applicants need 
not re-apply. ( 583 B 2 ) 


NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE 

CITY OF NEWCASTLE UPON 

KENTON SCHOOL (GROUP 

•sIlrtniiMd 1 *»uoiPfi?d enll 
axpamneed teacher for 

gnffKSS Hood T, ncMeV Sf 
county co-educBtlonai 
comprehensive echoo) far 

Bpproxlmntely 1 ,600 pupils 
between Hid egos 1 1 years to 
in years. 

The school is In Group 12 
i ■*l* p Y purpoae* Le. with- 
range or C 18 .I 95 - 

£ 19.511 per annum. 

Application Forms and 
further particulars ore qbtain- 
IJ 1 ? topm and returnable to 
Jack Chaddarton. Director or 
Education. Education Off Ices, 
Civic Centra, Newcastle upon 

Jm-. bv 


Remedial Posts 
Heads of Department • 

NORTH YORKSHIRE 
CGUNTY COUNCIL 
HARROGATE GRAMMAR 

Arthur's Avenue. Harrogate 
ll'JI Comprehensive 


to continue, sad expand work 
with slow-laarnera and chil- 
dren In need of remedial 


attention. Ability to teach 
Mathematics to low ability 
groups essential, and know- 
ledge of diagnostic testing 
very desirable.. 

Please apply by letter to 
the Hoedmlstreos. giving cur- 
riculum vitae ana the names 
of two rafaraea end enclosing 
S.a.e.. If .further . details ere 
required. CloMng data for ip- 
pJloBtions 4 th June. 1B8S. 
1389181 4 13101 S 


I v liinvu. t p« in w _ B aa w 

M S3&.w HEADSHIP 


Ilffiuililinnlnr 


Secondary Education 


. - 

MK 4 S r ?D n ^ ^ ar **ol<l B Doclit 

sm " 1 ' 

Mi TlSSKf-ii 

.’ fl Jart, .. -8, ■ subsidiary aub- 


OIIOMLEY 

LONDON HOROUOH OF 

tBb RAM8DEN SCHOOL 
Foil uiiaa „ , • . - 

Tlnraijel Hand, Orpington. 
Orclun ?0 Hrad Teacher Roll 

Aupl l rollons irom vvell-qual- 
irferi nnil o*nc,rlenced gradu- 
ates arc Invited for thlB po*t. 


Groiip12 ■ 

8TRATT0N UPPER SCHOOL 
AND COMMUNITY COLLEGE 
Eagle Farin Road, Biggleswade ; 
Bedfordshire'. 

From SopwnbH 1^82 o re soon as poaaJbie thoroaftar. 
AoDflcatkxis are Invited from suftaWy. qdaHfled and 
'experienced teftchera tor the -HMlijP ig tWf Omup ; 18 
Unper Sohdoi and fibmcrwnfty College. Estimated number on 
• ro? September 1982: t.005 pupils aged IMS plus yaare. 

Strattori UpperScboolla a largd, mixed, rural comprehansIvB 
Mm mmi nt tho Counlv. t sbares aporta 




■Ni« 1 1 Potts 


at as nro Invited for mm po*»«i 

xvhlch XVIII become vacant 

from 1st September ! OfiS on 
tlm resignation Sf, 
Hnadmistrnss. The Ram Brian 


School * for "Ol rl a » Hftfc- 
bocundnry i,. l ?SlbP»3« 


as a iivn-iomi "i'»» 
lioiialvn schools, *JJJ . '•* - 
pupils on roll at present, or 

n.rm“ Tim °f? a JoS." suiR 
rurm with tho atljaconl boys 

"telilincs with removal 
and associated jSSf— 

paynbln In certain tircumot 

obtained from *?i 5 M firom- 


Upper School serving me eew oi up 
andmusio fadHties with the Community: and Mb A B-acra 
Sdiod Faim on site- , ■ ' • • , ; ■ ■: • - 

AoDllcttlofl fdrm* and-lurther detail* are avallaMe from 
^ Chief Education Officer, County Hall, Cautdweli 

Street, Bedford. 1 

Cloolng dale: 4th Juno, 1982. : 


| 3 l TPS 11 .( 1 . 
a vffiarei. 


rnraljit or si*i»' 
ilny 4 til June. 


' ^ri- 


iCOUNTY COUNOLj 


SURREY 

COUNTY COUNCIL 


TORO Q U E a H0SfTHE L C& ALL0WANCE “ 13 ^ 

Generous Relocation Expenses In approved cases 
Temporary housing may be available 

Seaae) 10 * 8urray Vacar>cy L,sr avalteWe on request (aae 


HEADSHIP 


,M A fi Lll ^ GHAM COUNTY SECONDARY SCHOOL 

Warllngham 


2?-1°|y 0ar |- Estlmaied NOR (January 1893) 637 plus itth 
sixth form. Salary scale: C16.525-E 16,680 p.e P 

EBSSS n &,'¥S!ffi!!f r county 


Education Officer fTP/APD), County Hall, Kingston upon 
Themes. Surrey rM . 2DJ (ess please). Comoleted 
eppiioations should be relumed not taler than 4 June, 1982. 


ilea 


Inner London 
Education Authority 


HEADSHIP 

ELLIOTT (SM) SCHOOL 
PULLMAN GARDENS 
LONDON SW15 3DG 

Applications ara Invited for the headship of this 
school which becomes vacant oh 1 January 18S3 
following the resignation to take up a senior post 
with another Authority of. the present headmaster, 
Mr G. Rospigtlosl. Roll 1361. Burnham group 12 
plus inner London allowance. 

Please send foolscap sae for application form and 
further details to the Education Officer, EO/TSiO/ 
BA, County Hall, London SE1 7PB. Closing date 
for the return of completed application forms 11 
June. 


Somerset ijjf 


CRISPIN SCHOOL 
STREET 


for this 11-16 mixed comprehensive school, 
1169 on roll. Appointment to commence January 
1083. Salary: Group 11. 

Application forms and details (S,A.E.) from 
Staffing (T) Section, Education Department 
County Hall, Taunton TA1 4DY, 

Closing date: 4th June, 1982. 


Tiffin.. Olrls School 

Kingston-uppn-Th^mes - 

Applications are Invited for the post of 


which wilf become vacant on the retirement of • ; 
Miss E* J.' Davis*' B.Sc, M.Sc In September i 
1982. Tlfflh GirfS School is a selective,': 
Grammar School (Group 10) with 711 Girls on v 
roll, including 148 In the 6th foim, 

Further particulars may be obtained from the •; 
Head of Schools Service, Directorate of ' 
Education and Recreation, Guildhall, Kingston 
upon Thames, Surfey KTI 1EU. 

The .closing date for applications Is 2 weeks 
after the appearance of. this advertisement, 


.re .-j- - i -I 
-i ■ :-xt 


u 1 - • ...v;r ^ - '• -^4 - • - - - : . 

' • ;■ v lv. .% . : ^ , »f . • • 

. 9 j* .1 •'•ii ; ' • x A\*t C •• - a * * e 9 • * •. * 1 

'*■* ft * ‘ • * 


[W 



SEC REMEDIAL 

cant Inuod 

Scale 2 Posts and above 


YORKSHIRE 

HE- ADVERTISEMENT 
HOWDEN CLOUGH HIGH 
SCHOOL 
iREF. 73211 

Windmill Lonn. natiey. IV. 
Yorkslilro. VVK I 7 OLD 
Required lor January. I'i»3. 
an axperimiciut teacher. Srnlo 
2. la work wltliln dm liennrt- 
nmnt of Romodlnl F-liiiMlInn 
at rtils 11-18 Girin' i'omi»n<- 
lianalvr Krhuol. 

Application fin-mi, nnrl 
lurtriur part i.nlnr* (S.A.l'.li.i 
from (lie lfaa<!mn*tn,- nt tin- 
«rhcml in tvhtim < >tni|iLi«(i , il 
[amis Hliouhl lin i-,*! iii-iu*, t iu 
noon as ppialliln. •3!ia.t I a 

uioaa 


Seals 1 Posts 


CAMDRIDQESHIRE 

HUNTINGDON AREA 
H1NCHING BROOKE SCHOOL 
Brampton Rond. Huntingdon. 
Combs 

11-10 Vul. Coni. Ml xml 
1800 

Sralo I tea char at Rcnw*i|i«l 
Education. mint rati far 
finptrniliur, 1082, In take 
L'liarqn of a flrnt ymr dn» 
and aliaro work uf rlaiiurt incut 
It inner up the nclittn). 

Fully dove I aped C.’omiirn- 
henalvo School In an( standing 
sotting, serving Huntingdon 
and neighbourhood. 

Apply by latter (a tlaad- 
masier with curriculum vitae 
and names of twu rcrnroci. 
1394331 131033 


NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE 

EDUCAIIUN CDMMITCE 
11 EATON SCHOOL 
TEMPORARY IIEM l-.l llAI. 

TE Ar:llEH 
< hi <ili* 1 luistl 

Rrnuli'ril from ff«*i,t,uum*r 
lilB’i. a siiltubly (lunlifUut 
tonipiiriirr umi-iin* inr 
•inpoliitiin'iii to a Sc.ili* I punt 
far Knrmidlul Claes Trecniliti. 

f t li mill 1 1 lin in L Witlidriivi- 
t n m III nu. 

AppiIlui lull toriiii nri* 
dtitoliiulilo i nun mill ratnrii- 
iibln tu Hit* I it 1 -ill Ti*««*lii*r. 
Iti'iitoii irlmiil. ,|i>iiiiniiil Park 
\Vi*Mt, Ni’ivriwll'' ii pan Tvin*. 
NET (III 1 . l»v iitdiiv Jili Juiii*. 
iort-2. t3H‘iii3i i .1 i irj'j 

NEWHAM 

LONDON Hit HOI it ill <11 
NEWHAM 

i.itti.l ii.Foiin nciinm. 

Hr ■•will till It i mil. l.oinliiii, El J 
(■FT 

11 rail l'<*iulii>r: Mr. H. .1. I'./rn 
Nllllitii'r oil rail: H311D. 
Homniltal Trai-liri- i lolilt'oriiiv i 
one i nr nt. Minin 1. 

Ilnqulrml Nr*|> t iMiihi'r . IUS‘J 
Vutiiiicy tlur lu lli-.ul i>f l»n- 

V iartimmit mi Hinlurunv Iuiivk. 

•I'nlImhiuiT visits %v i’lr i line. 
Tnl. ATM 802 4- 

l.cimtcill A I low am-'*: £7fiU 

plus Hai'tut Priority Alla- 
vvailrn. 

Application Itiriun (n.n.n. 

B lnnem avullabln (ruin tin* 
ead Tnoflier. to whom cuni- 

r listed farms should bn re- 
urninl bv 1st .luiii’, 1982. 
Illrnctin- of t'.iliu ill ion . 
Ei I urn! ion ()(((•’ iin. It ruml w.i V , 
hi rut lord. I .iiiiiliin. LIS 4IIIL 
(3*123 1) 13 10:12 


SHEFFIELD 
CITY OF 6IIEKFIEI.il 
EIIUCAT1UN DEPARTMENT 
A HBE YDA Lh GltANUE 
SCHOOL 

Hastings no art, Sliarrield. H7 


CAMBRIDGESHIRE o teacher for Ihn Rcinc- 

kinnmr V « nP . dial Department, Sea In t who 

flA WSTONUI II ARP Oliould Iibvq tlia necessary 

Pqllpcp VILLAGE skills to tench a class liovlna 

Rnaiiiriari ( nF c nn> __, hMr a«I u cut Ion al/ behavioural prob- 

Hemedml 1 wo?k P nnAninK tft« ot"ar°bo\nS SpSSc 

ho mi Tvs 'commiinitv CaiFiTJfn Application forms -and 
U £ !» R » i u£l!V t la!?. further details are available 

Etifd An ih. "ija* from tlia tlnatl Teacher to 

"T «ikS5R!! , * rn oul " whom they should br ro- 

h AAniVrswS£^ b turnad within 3 wanks nr tlin 

clay fnrj "Vt? W* "eiu r? 1« u I Mm° ' v ( t n'n ^"“7^1 ?f “"WJffii 

giving names and addrussns of lanai/j laiuztf 

two referees to the Warden, 

Tins Village Cnllnpft, New 

Rand. Sawiton, Cimbrldao, 

C.OII 4BP, as noon no possible. 

(393091 131033 SHEFFIELD 

rmtVWAI I CITY OF BHEPFIULD 

tiUKNWALL EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE ASHLEIGHflCKOOL 

Trier® Is a sc tin mo for Aoad. BhefTiald, 

Removal Expanses. SI* aQB 

FOWEY SCHOOL Reoulrail Tor Sop tom bar. 

Windmill, Fowoy, PL33 i HE I 0 ?? 1 * toaclmr of Remcllal 

Group 10 SubJoctM, Sinlo I. Caiididataa 

No an Rail: 090 for this post almutd Indicate 

Iloadteschar: Mr O.H. Band to which furihnr areas they 

REMEDIAL TEACHER SCALE could ^cuntrlbute. Th. ( «hlUt ? 

tfiscliina ntt ViI" ,,t,, |oi , |ulrnd rUr fur rtf?ah..S 

SeulomBor In teach bsslr tu ufr " r »" 

■kills to small urnupa uf ilill- ,,0 1 ■ 


Application forms -and 
further details are avallablo 
from the llnatl Teacher to 
whom they shuuld br re- 
turn ad wltliln 3 weeks of tlm 


i.il 

i •• 




appna rsjico of ililu udvertlac- 
monl. (38917) 131022 


SHEFFIELD 

CITY OF SHEFFIELD 
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
A8HLE1CH SCHOOL 
Glandless Road. Shefriald, 

si* 5 qh 


St* aqn 
Ruqulrod ror September. 
1083, a toucher or Remcllal 
Subjects, Sen in I. Caiididataa 
for tills post should Indicate 
a which furthnr areas they 


S kills to small tirnups uf ■ hll- 
rnn with Inarniiiiidirrii iililns 

rinajjas Jl wiV! ,,, sVi?, rr -b“n 

asked to mnhn u nirmll run* 


i n 1 1 : ./], 

t!i '{ •] 

•V.’.SrJ ' 

•pte [ 


DONCASTER 

.LBR8 HIGH SCHOOL 
• Mluliasl'a Uuail 
e^acarr. poncustar, DN4 

ApullpatloilB are InvItOU rrom 
axporfoncad nnd/or nnaafallst 
tntlnnd . rnmadlnl.. teaejinrs 
(Co lings leavarp will ho cnnsl- 
• UataUr fur . thd • ■ntioliitmnivt 
-.from the hnbjntiliiii of the An- 
tiinui Ttfin, 1082 to a bc«r« l 
. oo»t for.l jyoar as Tiirtiporury 


L'andiiiatn Una to ufnir but is 
not naitniuim. 

Anpiicutlnti farms mid 
furtliar UiiIiiIIn are itvulluliln 
from tun Hand toucher lu 
whom they nliuuld bn re* 
luriind within 2 wnnkrf or tlm 

KBKTWiW " J WWIi 


SHEFFIELD 

CITY CIF NHEI'FIELp . 

DEPA IVTMENT 

Dor win L"he L sYo 511(3 

wm ufefiT.i’v:'. 

B uallflod taaclinr to assist In 
10 work uf an cxpandlmi 
area Of Hip auliaol. Hr alt. |. 


tho work uf an. Qxpondliiii 
a roe or thp aoliuol. Hcalo I. 

. Appllaalloii forms ■ ami 
further, do tolls arc avullabln 
from thn llvnu Tnnchor t» 
whom they aliould bn rn- 
turnsU wlllilii a wookf or tho 
nppnnraiiro of tills auvertlsn* 
manl. (AnSo&i 131022 


. ppat ipr.lvaar as TiimporarT 
Romnillsl Tauchar. U won III 
be holpful IT the putiuldnta 
; could also offer niqtiimnptlc*- 
4110 uarsun. suuglit should 
hove £ nenulua, svmpntliy rnr 
Mil* work in llin linn in skills 
.. with small groups lit *-*— 
■ ar aoucKil* 5 OH o( 


WALTHAM FOREST 

WfMgimAW 01 ' 



• axnansoH, Will bn 
. npnrovad caeca, • 

_• ApplTnMlon • forme 
ill «r (lertlculnrs- urn 
Train Mr. J. *1 
nr, at 
(e.a.o. > 


wliom'oampfSted ft&ms’eAbilSS : 


DORSET: 

tlEAMlNSTER. SCHOOL 


An equal iippurlunlly 
o in ploy ei- 

Tlm lloruiiuli (■ w.l II ill 
raae.h oT.IJoitlrnl Lnrfc 


i nnsy . 
on uiiil 



E noch ur.f-biilrnl London uni 
ordarnu tiv .linpiiiii Voresl. 
ianrian Ad8|tf()(t lu eelui-y 

MONOIIX 

ChthnJor'd Iloud, 
Wellfinmaiow. KIT AAA. 
Hand enaction Mr A. T, 

fcho^ , *f>SRp,W™ ? p ,, W. 

yoaro (850 on roll) tp.wt 


nr in SB. 
I Sun I n l 
oh an el vo 
id 3,4-18 
to . Work 
tnUrnwnl 

oil OOI Bit 


eratrv wbrk-ie done mnlitly In 
. * smell- aroupa or by Jndiviuual- 
• axtrection. In tlia flret Inet- 
enae • title appointment is for 
one year only. Further derails 


V 


• ano^^o^ly, Further derails 

.T^ttsrtTar application (no 
farms) el.Vfna full curriculum 

*.- WhiH-. m *? l TB8W' 


Apply by, letter td-. Head 
teacher eurlnslnn aurrieuium 
vitso and uivlna namee. mid 

Mr or ,wo ro h r m 



tEICE^TqRSHiaE 


■jVEBT^URSEX 


By Subject Classification 

Arts and Design 
Heads of Department 


BRENT 

MINI KIN lll>RltlK;>l ill' 
nil ENT 

MH11II KILIII'llh HIGH 
i mi x i:i « i sciiuiii 
Slnllnr.l lliiiiil, NIVA 
I R> ill 4110, ll.lHMnl.il 
t'rtill'llv hi Until I 
ItriiulraMl triini Si.|i|iiiulirr, nil 

nu rniNliKtU tmiiiiT t,i in* 
IIEAI1 €)L AMI 5) vvliu 

is iu'«t\nrv<l tu <hivi-k liAi-tl vi 
that tlm M'-imrt in fin iiiuv mu. 
Flinic In |ilitv n llvntv ii.lrt III 
HU* life ijI the vi lii'iul . Tin* 

hihi tiwiiil •-mitiniiitii will III* 

mile in iiinke nu imiuii'tnni 
i-iMi 1 1 * ■ tin 1 1 ■ >11 ill the kri'ii til 
itrnUin to tlm mliiiol'n ti lnlil v 
mini'nlill Inrlimiliinti riiurHi. 
mill will rnkiirii Hint stuili-uls 
r.uiitiiiun tu bn am i nnifullt 


E report'd lu ‘A’ level anil 
l.S.K. rxdiulnnijoiis. Londun 
nlluwanco uf C799 nnr aiiuuni 
Is unyiibln. ttrent k run* 
dll men tul!v rnninilitnii tu mill. 

1 1 -I'll 1 1 Ill'll I ■•lllll'lll luu . 

A ll|jl |nit Cull fiirinv (KAl:i 
iililuiiinhln (Inin Uif llii, id- 
IiiiX'Im-i rr-liiriinlilf wlllilii Id 
dnvi, i.V((iri4i I t I a I II 

KENT 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
CANTKItDLntY DIVISION 
THE AltCIIlU&HUP’K C.E. 


(AIDED i 
SECONDARY SCHOOL 
Csntbrliury 
Mixed - Roll 363 
Requirnd from September, 
1982. a temporary Head of 
Art fScaln 2> probably until 
Juno. 1983, during the aba- 
□ nee or a teacher on maternity 
leave. 

Application forms and 
further datnlls from the Head 
Teacher at tha Sellout, In St. 
Stephen'* Hilt, Ceuterbury 
(e.B.e. please). (39374) 

131218 


LEICESTERSHIRE 

MIINOELLA school 
W yrunibo Uootl, Lolcostor 

Ca R‘Sri o Vi93 ,V0 

HEAD OF ART 
Seals 3 


Required August, well 
qualified and. experienced 
teacher to take charge or 
tlia Art department. 


Further details from the 

Hs;v«asrw..r7irffi 

licularn nml uamas and 
addrnnsns or two rnCerens 
(s.u.e.). (38370) 131218 


NORFOLK 

No. an Rulli 1139 

„ Brule 3 
II sad nf Art 

.-IfSntdrcH rnr Ssntrinber, 
1982. ®n nntiiUNlestli: ami 
suitably _ nxporlanr.eil 
. Teaulinr. 'Art ie teimlit tu 
'AMovo!, 'o', lover end 

A|ipl|i:atlnn far me rrcim 
unit ret nr nod tu the Jloaii* 

HWtfi ■“ ,h0 ?™ ! 8 

SOLIHULL 

HEAD OF A lit Hfole 3 
rta.nulrad Hnutemuei 1 , to wt«*| 


HEAD OF Alit Hfole 3 
rttiuiilrad Nnitinmuei 1 , (» work 
wllhin Bii An and,, flnslnn 
I'niiiilly Mnlvni'ii Ilnll Is, nn 
1.1 *. 16,111 -elilllly Jtrhnnl a) 

P liqiit. 800 with modern nrl 
iiailillnB. 

Apply Immnillniely hy letter 
with curriouluni vilne and twu 

Rwrr tw ,fco ""“rapnRri 


LINCOLNSHIRE 

Art and Creft,- 9qei® a, for. 


Scale 1 Posts 


( i)l'NlY 111 A VI IN 
tVI 1 HYtVlHin St HI 111! 
Miilnsiv ui-tli Di-ivi*. Hi 1 h1,.| 

II a I 3 ‘ini. 

<1.1 bins .mil nlrl-ii 

Itr qiilr.'il lor •* mb i*i 

(i-.K-liri- nl Alii .tu*! i HAT 1 


DERBYSHIRE 
EDUCATION COMMITTEE 

. NEW MIL1.H SCHOOL 

'"hISVS'.n"" 

Tali 43284, 

1 1*15 Com prclinnsi vii 

(170 Nix Hi I'ur in l 

Knelilou Textile* 

Itnnutrtul li»i* knnlnmtmr 
til teevh tile ■ III J J III: I 

tiiroiiunoul tlm ni-hucil lip 
111 'A' I o V|i I mill offer i'i*n«* 
live work ..in folirlm nml 
nr|. A fin xl lil n nu|i|-<mi:li Is 
nnrnsssry, A Neele 2 uuei 
"iqy , pe' aveilnliln fur a 
null able natl(Tidnte. 

. llntiiils nml appplh-ntlon 
rorins from the llenil* 
insstnr. 


■ ... rJerhyalilro 
Cuiiiinll la nn ei 
tiuilly nmnlnynr 


ru Couttly 

nn equal tipnnr* 
invar. 


Scale 2 Posts and above 

LEICESTERSHIRE. 

THE GRAMMAR SCHOOL 
Soft mb In. advertisement 

. i?. d .v».TfsW hmg 


, , .idipt . wit 

!■:■■■■ s»Wt 


m i: timkshih', a ti„nm. mnumn uj* 

...mmmiii ■‘Olf-U'IBLD 

A'iiW?. 17AL«i,Wlf*Mw 

i;..‘ 

AMI ll li MU HA A.t<; Laim. 8h«ffi,| d 
'|i.ii iiiimiii iii llu>, I. al Art. Scsig 


IIUMIIKKSIDK 

I 111*1 VI ION i (ISIMII II I 
HIV I<>|| IN 
III III I i IH|i •■< llin II 
lloiln.ii.l II.., 

I4i'l|llll r.| fill Hpiil,. ,|| 

I ■'ll.’ •)■- A I II 11 | I All I 

l I V> 111 II • II V. V l |V r 
l>*iri*ili l.i l.iln n ll\.-1s km| 
mu, , r-llf.ll ,li-|l.l, HI ),., 1 1 |,| nn,, 

ml i ml I .1-1 II I lUIII'r nli»n*|\ ,. 

’■ t*.**il llin -V|i|i.,( i)l«*i | ,.111,11. 
■I.)l. will l,r rviii 1 . in| I,, nii<|,i' 

« II..MHIIP . .||||1>II|I«.,|| |„ „„ 


t lio 




Ie'. 

1 lllll! 

III, ■■■■ 

lliiiii! (lu* u.ir 

.nut i«liili r> 


\ lM>H 

ruiniii 

III 1 . 



in 

ih**» 

Ii'V.’Ih 

nu- (lei,.,. 

nu* nt 



•* 1 1 n 

1 1\ <* III oil nr.*n« <1 

fill 

ll l((l* 



twill 

hr |n lit ii 

i.*r i 



■ ll« 

•lliiiiil 

lililKlr- („i‘ 


llllllt,* 

IV 1 

iiiin 

'Mill 

Inimll IliillMi, 

.mil < 

■ lllll! - 


8*1111’ II 

iln*iiii 

Alillll V («• 

!■*.■■ 1, 

(■•it. 



1 l.in In r rasniv i«tl 
IMfllHM lt|V|l|v tu 

1 «(•• 1 1 
1 lt*.Ml|l|l1'.IV*l 

Kl 

*:nt 


nivlini i nl rl> uIiiiii vli.ir , In 
ln|-r<(< (lixl iti-inii*> of Inn 
lur.'iw l>l: e.|4 J 1 -I d 4 f. pl.t 

<3ll4<»n IM1 33 

'llEHKHlUIIK 

KI'.NNIIT t'OMI'lll Ili.NsI Vi 
SC.IHHIl, 

Kiiinrv l.iiiir . riiitl. limn. 
Ill'iKlInil. ill'fk*. 

N.i> It. I I 0(1 

I I I - I H ml* »ll i aiiil|iri'll<*it*l\r.| 
RealulriMt (Si>|a|i-mlia-i I'Ol.t 

OH ADI IA TF: roll I INI. AIM 
(Hi-nln I | iri tuna h na i iias llin 
full nge mill nlilluv rnuim wall 
llin iiussililllly uf workllin laa 
(•Cl. *11* mill *A‘ |nvnl>. All 
(iili'i-anl In nrlnl tnnkin.i nuat • 
• li' 3 >lim,-iiHlaiiinl ala--.|ana 

w iaaa lit || ( . ilia iia|viii|lii.|i- . 

I'll'IlVla ,I|I|||V III Ilia- 

tnila'lini- for ,i | ■ |i 1 i a nlt.iii fiai-iii 
f*nif.|. Ciiiiliiu (jnlr .Inna* 7. 
DrrkMhlrn (himiiv Cimni II I* 
■in i*nuul imiaiartiilillv i*iii- 
liloynr. (4434B) 131U*.fJ 

CORNWALL 
EI>liCATION COMMITTEE 
There la a removal PkiimiHM 
scliome. 

SALTASII SCHOOL 
Wnardo Rond, Salln*h, 
Cornwall PLI3 4 AY 
Group Nu 1 1 
No on roll: 1 180 
Sixth Form or: 130 
HaadtescUar! J.a.P. EilwiiriH, 
M.A- DIp.Eri.iOxnni 
CRAFT & DESIGN SCALE I 
Far Septombor, 1982 a nnil 
qualified sud uiitlmstusiii 
teacher to uffnr Art end l-oli- 
rtc UtudlBB tu both tioya amt 
girls uf all abilities In lint ann 
rnngo II ■ 14. I'tinnisi. iniiu 
HI) suite workrooms fur liiilh 
tnplrs um avallalilu. 

Aliulli-ailan (unnVIurllirr 
iloialla/ncknowlodnenieiit rraaiii 
tho Haadtaacher on retrlut of 
s.a.o. 139117) 131222 

CUMBRIA 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
CALDEW SCHOOL 
Dsiatan, Carlisle 
1970 on Roll, mixed 
comprehensive 11-18 years) 
Roqulroa ror September 1982 
e talented TEACHER OF ART 
I scale 1) to Join a dnpnrimniii 
with . n wall planned and 
varied curriculum thrmuiliuut 
the whole age anil ulullt-v 
rnnon. 

APnllcniits should lie Milo 
tu ninko a major i-iintrlliiitlnii 
to work In textiles or i era- 
mica. 

Ability tu . touch lllstiii’y »l 
Art at 'A* level would he n 
dlnliiii t iad viiiitniiia. Caillmin 
Innvnrs wulcomn. 


DORSET 

Dorset . 

CnmprDhonsIviifUo-fld (13-18, 
MOO on, roll) 

-Ramilrnd aaptomher. taorhor 
of Art Basle I with particular 
■ emphasis . on', ampulon and 
, Textiles. Facilities for Hcrnmi* 
printing, . Dyolnq. Paliria 
. Frlii tlno nntf Fhotograplilu 


>•> ..Ji- .-7 -AT 7 * . •• ,V f t* ^ 

-.^- -^eoulretl^ :: : PjbbtdRT^ie.r, ' 6. ' V>:’ -r-'r. 1 

Vlfltl-HSt i ?( iduvlaaliiahaa * ’’ '* - ' ' I , i. ■ ... M 

'-.a: gapnr ttb 

aw 


(?■ -s 

\^.M 


TPfer*- 
JtilK. 

l)i , non-ex 


■WR8T SUSSEX 
Soutnei’n Arbd' 


..adysrtlsenieht, : SnClQslhi 
• - SV and .quotfnfl . tqlaphohi 
. Thitri bars ;>jr. • «wb Fe if £ r aorf 


VVA.RWldKSUlR^ 


HAMPSHIRE 


3eaustsSi£ 


ii?t(na*?ft U 


MATTY'S SIXTH 


iciailais. in all 
lartmont. -Cmidl* 
be. able to. taa«h 

y, A p to 

ad .ad personal tuibra 
as sub Jpct . tutors. . 


• f • >r an .* 1 1 , hi ■ alalelu 
!(»■• llnjil ( ...I. U'M .It 

|.a W lla till . i, natal.. Ir, | 

■ ail.l lir r.'lua n^,| 

■ Hu ,«f < la I naltri 

Td.lt 1 1 I TIM.! 


i lll<N I V l :< ll'Na It 

i him: v 1 1 « in iii i* v it i mi. m 

■•TV \I I III V I — ll IN 
l Wl.llHU \\| i \ )l ' N | v 
-.1 i < US 1 1 V It V lit IV*. ‘ 
il III ll 1 1 

1 III,* II., 1 1 1 llmi.l I i|t •>« nl, ,||l| 

Hat) I la fl> 

tt.'tltlil ■•■( , I'tltil. 

»**1 1 ■•! All .lllll'lll I |i|tll 

ft of In la, Itilu ii tr-<iiii nl «|i 

• •lli<*i la-n, l|a*l*a . iiii-i laa,, (ii.ii. 
*!■ nl nilila*. Ir l.iiiii .ia.|il mu . 
tn-r 1*111 V. I ll** ll tu ,1 will 
>IMI.t|.Jilll|lt I a* w||li 1 1| r llia.ll 
till !•' si Ini'll fan iuIiiii at |lllta"l 

srlttiill ait I .Tint mi nu** all,, 
A)l|l|la (It tims will) a air I Ilia - 
■ lain »|IB" nail) Iimaars ii,i,l 
,aiti(i <.na<*a i,r In,, i(|i-irrt In 
III** lli'rtil 'X r *)• lii*i ai* sia.iii at*, 
I an i-, | lair a.YMH*il I A I, 'll.! 


K1KKLFKH 

Mi: iitiiroi man < iiuncii. 
I'UI.NK VAI.I I V UK • IV 
SCHOOL 

tdlUtiMt l.niu*. I.liidivmiii-. 
Iluilala. I'sll*- 111 IIIW *)SI. 

(iti:r. Men 

Iti.qnlrml lair 31 Aiiuntl IUH2. 

II Inni lllT fair AHI. SC. ALL I 

III (Ills Inr ■(■■ I I 1140 Ilia, Ills) I I 

- 18 a <llil|>ri'llf*iislv*. lartinail . 

The aintiar tun'll I tifiu )u*s all 
|in nils Hi Years | ■ 3 mill I hr 
niililis follow a Inr i oiirs» In 
i I'lrt 4 anal 3. Tlir sin raasslail 
nppllrnm wilt lu* exitci trrt to 
teitrli In all ynni- iiriiii|i« from 
1st to Till end. for a siillntilv 
tiuullllril (irl-siill, siimn sixth 
form work ninv lir avnllahlr. 

I.rtters til enuIK ntiou to 
the llrndfnqstrr iilvltui iiirrl* 
a'tiliam vlter alllal ll.tlllrs nml 
DililrrSsnx uf luai 1-rfrirrs 
13947 4 1 131222 


LONDON 

KJNti AM Hi:il St Hum. 


J»ti«i IndiapniUenl 
(443331 


Ha tiiaiilx. 
1.11222 


NORFOLK 


llifill SCHOOL 
llekwrfl (toed. Iliiwoliant 

Nn. nii'itoll 1 1 2.1 n 
MUetl 1 1 *1W vtmrn 

Mi air I A (IT ITACIILH 

i-pqiilrml . Sr-ttinnlini* 
I'lH'J. tu siim-iitlisii in 3I» 
work with r.M'aitiibs ns 
pari of it team. Ilomoviil 
exnnusns paid wltliln An* 
thiirity's scllninn. 

AttltlV Itv let tut* nl v l mi 
iki mes of lvt<» ri-lurwix mid 

H i ir ir 1 1 1 inn vllnn to Ilir 
eiiilnieai m* fioni whom 
i ii ri her uerlli ulni-s (s.n.r. 
iileasr ) m e <1 vnllnliif . triii** 

isRunv 1 ' 


OXFOUDHlHKFi 

COHN. I A* Cf.ltlNClL. 
IIIDCOT filltl.M NtTlr)i)|. 
Hljerwood It u nd. ltUlrnt. 
CtXU OIIA 

t I |.|* VUIIIIM elleltslve 1, lllll 
nn roll! 


Umiulrnil for SeiUniutini I'l.HK 
— All n ii ill us ln»t 1 1 : . Alt I - 

limOuir IHi’nl* I) siinrlfttlsl lit 
llultniv fill this lively <|e|illrl" 


I'lrasn iiUiily, ns hnpu. n* 

( ins'll liln , liy IMInr Im-liiallilu 
till i.,v. itntl tinn\«K tit mil 
rn far nos lit tlie llnniUeni linr 
(a.n.n. ill diiihi I. fit rlli nt iln* 
tails HVallRlila. tA'i4l> 1 1131222 


BKFTON 


emphasis . on;. GraplilDn and 
Textiles. Facilities for Hcrnmi- 
printing, Dyolnq. Paliria 
p foies os n "“ Fholograpliiu 
^PiirAer ilstnllt aiid npullca- 
lion form Ca.n.q. please) front 
neacimnatar. 

. NB. Anpltcttlloi) ' are res- 
tricted to Callogn Leavers and 
- tencli era not ^ employed fur 
September, 1982, to, enabla 

Jha Authority . to aamply . with 
the ■‘oqurremontx tor tile . Job 
Release Bohem*, .for the Pro- 
se it t post holders, <43388). . 

• faiaaq 


DORSET ■..*•'■•. 

'KEmf welch School 
i Her beet Avenue, Parka tone, 

i0?Q-bun(Js, mixed j 2-16 
> Paqulred for . SoptoTijbsr. 

.1232, . Temporary Stale I Art 


MBTHproi.iT an iiminimii 

(.Ivariiiiul IltiniL llriMliv. 

T^f^'ojvAIV-? ^BAOm.U Jll 
AlvT (Hr air 1) rni|tilreil fur 
Hnptemuor 1982, t<) i-iivw* 

maternity leave, nutl t<> trnrli 
Hiiiijnn} tb 'O' niitl 'A* levnl. 
. Apnllretlun. rucnis . niiU 


SHEFFIELD 



TM1INT 


■woo Avenue, Hi 2 3AQ 
o . .for fieptfinibnr. 
k part-time to, ill teacher 
, _rt Is required to teach 
mainly at and.una 3rd year 
level.. An . Intoresi In silk 


soredn ^printing terlinbiuea 
would, bo • helpful bn* not 
essential. Scale l, 

Application' . forma • stid 
further details are avullabln 


aPDOIntifinnt 
ar .only, 
by fetter to 


>»■«. “nfliy by' fetter to 


f urther, details are avullabl 
ram the Hdad - Tcnnhar tu 
whang . they should b_ - _ 
turned ..vKlnln two weeks of 


SHEFFIELD - 

mj" 


bsrt .tlmd Art 
irbxlmately l A wei 
Interested In tn 
ramies and threa-dl 
work, within the 




developing 

S J ' Work "within - Vh e ^.SS part 

-SSJP Jss. 

wnnto aui'h ~«i — — UP ( lU and' 

fibr - dofpdis 'ere "itv a ll^ 

. n '• the Ilona Tbedlinr in 1 
_ loiild be . ct* 
iHrrtefl wffltJn.i weak* ,'t*T lltft 

'r 


■m-.at. I AH. *110) ■ d W«ie. 


HOI-UIULL 

i-VnK'ldVflMlTIu 

VVatci fit i llin itnaii, Caitu 

((■ ..iiiw li h . iiirniiniihsm ' 

H •<■■'■ I ra-al i,||- Nriiirmbaar lau 
.» in ii, hrr ur i: ii a v ti« co .5,* i 

AN! l |T.» :ilN< ll.ou V ISc.li Q fi 


I •Mirxa-x iBcnnoron 

•Vt'itllt .'(ton (urm and i,h> 
••1 iiAi-Ha II lain frnm th“ IKS’ 
ui.iaaia.r III Ilia srluial, iT.u - 

•LI.VMi 131223 


hoi.iiiuu, 


I lllll ATION COMMITTEE 
t.nm nrATxi htihooL 
*•;"*> I *ii n a*. Nollliult. Wail 
Mtalliuiala 

( ,,r i"P»«n\har 

cV.aVVi»'hicA. ^ En QF 

Auplv Ii v lettar la tho 
lla- mini mu or al the school u 
NU'III IIS unxslbln. (394 50) 


WEST SUSSEX 

MOUTH ERN AREA 

kciu)oT TLEI,AMPTON . 

lllll ltnnil. I.luirhampton 

WAnVjl? , ' QmPr,lf ' 8n,lVe 

vrm&i & a wm 

Irvrix Iii ilirivlna daparlmim 
Mlfnriiiii w-ldo range or ikllli 
nml loi-liiUmina In Arl. Criii 
and I ) ("i lain Kilua alien. Condi- 
tlittrx nrn ashril ta indlnh 
Du.-lr uvtn partlmiar ipt. 
• lalllKUlillllS. 

Aunlv lu UnadniBitar sbliig 
rrlnvmii uersunnl dsislli ug 
mini ex and addrncias of two 
refnroes. (384 73) 131311 


WEST SUSSEX 

WM U *‘ 

Kc Uuut Lane. Aalsny. POiO 

•II.II 

tliroun 9, Mixed 
fromiirehniisivn) . .... 

l ffli i s , !...r.’Tr,P LX 
MV-utTA idSISSS 

Iii AmiiII Kilin-ailnn. 

I iirin unil uoislis iron 
Iltini1mn«li>i' nn recalBlP' 
■'.«,)*. ur tel*, balsuy *«»■ 
CVl.lllHI •»!*« 


WII.THIHRE 

rnr. t (iumiam school . 

The Tvnlnn*. t.-ursliaui.. wilt* 

Heilii I red fur ho Pl«n>bs r, i 

-Isil 

c.iiiiiiri'lieiiitivi' 8v , jU u, yBB S. 
pu III lx tim'd ll • ** Y “- 
(iflllfl plllTKISe I 


idiennivi 1 ^'j^vpnrt. 
uTiVTiuxn'bu.l.'j^ll.ld 
nml Hu* subjert sroj “ 


iiiS'S'S.W 


Careers „ 

Heads of Department . 

m ■ ■ 1,1 * " " * r i - * ' " * 

OX FO RUSH I HE 

six-form - eiilry «» r ?L intarsel 
nenstv* sellout due lo ■ ^ 

■,-nmnl llin. .al Din 


& d,f5 ^ 


MK Commercial Seblecls 


Heads of 


SUFFOLK _ 

IMs"^ 8aR ^ h,c,u * 


the TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21,5.82 


Encyclopedias, dictionaries 

and atlases 

Canute-like gestures " ~ 


John Welghtman casts a sceptical eye over Roget’s great enterprise 


Rout's Thesaurus of Englbh Words 
amT Phrases. Edited by Susan M 
Lloyd. 

Longman £9.95 . 0 582 55635 X. De- 
l uxe edilion £11.95 . 0 582 55551 5. 

This is apparently the fourth revision 
of Rogers Thesaurus since the death 
of the original compiler, and it would 
seem to prove that the book is an 
established classic among works of 
reference, because this fourth reissue 
marks the I30th anniversary of its 
first publication. Yet I have often 
wondered how many people actually 
use it for the purpose for which it 
viias intended. When 1 tried it many 
wars ago as an aid to trnnslation, I 
found that the entries, instead of 
clarifying my ideas, just threw me 
into a linguistic turmoil from which I 
had difficulty in recovering. 

For instance, if you want an 
alternative word for "feast”, you are 
faced with the series; “regalement, 

S , Lucullan banquet , reception, 
ilng-breakfust, minimi dinner, 
do, harvest supper, beanfeast . . . 
etc," alt of which may be wide of the 
mark and send you off into an 
irrelevant day-dream about la grande 
bouffe. On the snmc page, and in 
accordance with tho principle of 
opposites, side by side with ingestion 
k regurgitation: "vomit, bo sick, 
bring up, throw up, disgorge, retch, 
}°ck, gag, upchuck, spew, puke, cat, 
bonk, chunder, rnlph . . . etc" - on 
even more disturbing litany, flecked 
wlh mysterious gobbets. I decided 
that the Thesaurus was a confused 
mass of treasure, a sort of verbid 
Tttlnnkliomon’s tomb, to be visited 
occasionally for fun but of little ev- 
erydny help. 

.This Is paradoxical, given the fuel 
•hat Dr Peter Mnrk lioget wus nbscs- 
*ed with the idea of classification. 
According to Ms Lloyd's neenunt nf 
™m, ho was one of those impressive 


Victorian intellectuals who combined 
universal curiosity with a firm, pre- 
Darwmian belief In the ultimate, set- 
tled order of God’s universe, The 
TJiwmirus was an expansion of note- 
books he had kept Tor his personal 
use; he presented it as a source of 
vocabulary for translators and other 
writers but, more importantly, it was 
intended to stabilize the English lan- 
guage and to lav the foundations of a 
utopian linguistic future. 

His basic classification seems, at 
first sight, a model of clarity. The 
book is divided Into two parts, each 
with three main subdivisions: the Ex- 
ternal World (Abstract Relations, 
Matter, Space) and the Internal. 
World (Intellect, Volition, Eraotion- 
Religion-MoraUty). Roget recog- 
nizes, in his Introduction, that all 
language is fundamentally metaphor- 
ical; in dealing with the Internal 


and physical quality between near- 
synonymous terms. They know, as 
indeed all writers do if they reflect on 
the matter, that the real meat of 


World, we make great use of imag- 
ery - living, obsolescent or dead - 
taken from our perception of the 
External World. This necessitates an 
elaborate system of cross-reference,- 
which is worked out in admirable 
detail. 

But, within his clear divisions, 
Roget is content to bundle together, 
without comment, words and phrases 
nf the widest possible variety, among 
which the reader is invited to lake 
his pick: 

in making (his) . selection, he 
scarcely need ever engage in any 
critical or elaborate study of the 
subtle distinctions existing be- 
tween synonymous terms; for if 
the materials set before him be 
sufficiently abundant, an instinc- 
tive tact will rarely fail to lead 
him to the proper choice, 

This shows a breath-taking optimism. 
Wiintcvor their "Instinctive tact", 
translators in particular cannot avoid 
agonizing daily over the subtlo dis- 
tinctions in meaning, import, register 


unsettled universe, significance is not 
stable; the writer or translator has to go 
on indefinitely measuring his personal 
hunch against the shifting collective 
mass of the language or languages. The 
problem, In short, is not how to think 
up cognate expressions but how to 
evaluate each one as exactly as possible 
in the given context at the given time. 

Roget rounds off his Introduction 
with the hope that his classification is 
an initial step towards the creation, 
first of a Polyglot Lexicon, then ulti- 
mately of ,f a strictly Philosophical 
Language 

The probable result of the con- 
struction of such a language 
would be its eventual adoption by 
every civilized nation; thus realiz- 
ing that splendid aspiration of phi- 
lanthropists, tho establishment of 
a Universal Language. 

Ms Lloyd, echoing' Roget, suggests 
that this return to the status quo ante 
Babel may be a practical possibility 
in the computer age. I wonder. The 
problem is really a double one: a, we 
can only create a "truly philosophical 
language”, when we have some 
adequate idea of wbat goes on inside 
the brain and the nervous system 
when language is being used; so far, 
oil language is a tissue of psycho- 
somatic mystery; b x if the philo- 
sophical vehicle were created, could 
the nations be persuaded to use it? 

The existing natural languages are 
all barnacled over with lexical and 
syntactical illogicalities, only too visi- 
ble to the philosophical eye of the 
foreigner, but of which native speak- 
ers are ror the most part blissfully, 
unaware. These peculiarities alone 


complicate Roger’s clear divisions in 
endless Intractable ways. Thke, for 
example, the "simple* concept of 
moving through space . Con one 
imagine the French recognizing the 
monstrosity of conjugating some 
verbs of movement with eire and 
some with avoir , or the Russians 
admitting the superfluousness of 
their distinction between going on 
foot and riding in a vehicle, especial- 
ly when they disregard it in various 
idiomatic phrases? And what is true 
of movement is operative over the 
whole field of expression. To create 
the Polyglot Lexicon, the computer 
will have to chart Hie system of a 
myriad, aberrant pseudo-systems, 
cobbled together over the centuries 
and whose origins are irrecoverably 
lost in time. 

The unescapable fact is that lan- 
guages, admirably though they prove 
the uniqueness of homo toquens , 
come to us ready made, as part and 
parcel of the .evolving universe. They 
are ramshackle historical constructs, 


collective cultural organisms, operat- 
ing ungovernably os multi-deter- 
mined wholes ana, while they can be 
standardized to some extent when 
social circumstances are favourable, 
nnyone who presumes to issue com- 
mands of philosophical purity to 
them is in the position of King Ca- 
nute addressing the North Sen. It is 
also a paradoxical truth, well known 
to translators, that the expressive 
qualities of a given language are 
often inextricably bound up with its 
illogicalities and impurities, even 
though language in general is at the 
same time the only vehicle of "pure" 
reason. 

In bringing the Thesaurus up to 
date, Ms Lfoyd, as we now know 
from various newspaper interviews, 
has attempted a small, Canute-like 
gesture by demoting or excluding 
certain “sexist" or racialist terms, fi 
was perhaps rather naughty of her to 
do this without saying so frankly in 
her preface but, no matter, the 
ocean of English will roll on regard- 
less. 


o 

C3 

COMPANION 

DICTIONARIES 

PUBLISHED MAY 7th 


w n G by PC 
Otford £20,00, 0 19 864 221 0. 

S' h 1 re it i8 - pueri rtc pueltae: the 
ivoiumeof the book (hat Latin 
hi? k een awaiting impntient- 
rforhaira century. ‘TJIeep - an 
SJptian brew of real ale" may gel 
but the final fasd- 
h worth waiting for. This 

siuHxK* W 0l ? ar y that any serious 
» of Utin (and English for that 

ua 5W 1 ^ ave access to. There is 
need for another Latln-Engllsh 
until Jupiter sends the final 
s *op play; though I 
* n 8 century’s time we 
affi? IP* t€5tl,or by typing a 
'Cunfr Ji 6 classroom’s visual 
tiresome thing will 
taoliffif ?*)• t0 testlculor. ft is a 

„ . , .jstomory care, 

*|JJi punctilious citation of 

the Delegates of the Ox- 
“ *y Press derided thnl 
■English dictionary, at) 
anslation , of a Lalin- 
lary hut the Americans 
>rti was past mending, 
the majestic on- 


to ns ciiiniinHiign. me (in-™ !«» 

were spent in listing more than a 
million illustrative quotations on 
slips. After the war the, previous 
work was thoroughly revised, and 
the scope and slzo of the dictionary 
were extended. In 1954 Peter Glare, 
fresh from reading classics with great 
distinction at Cambridge, took over 
as editor. . : - 

His last fascicle has the character- 
istics of the preceding seven. It U 
very sharp on the details of science 
oiuf technology, subjects that are of 
particular Interest to contemporary 
Latinists. We now known moreexactly 
than any jeneration of schoolboys 
since the Dark Ages the precise na- 
ture of all those damned weeds m 
the Georgies or the wonders in Pliny. 
But when in doubt, the <h£onajyls 


I1V 1VWW - *1**888 

meanings in a masterpiece of scholar- 
ly clasdficfltloa. The trouble is that 
anybody who needs lo look up it! 
will get mired in the options. And 
anybody who . knows what nf means 


IUW viiwiry ----- 

always have the most interesting and 
least read entries In dictionaries; eg 
and end the in - the Oxford AM 

mi .i- i tLioaL* nurAfifllrl cliniilrl 


■SSV 5 ieftto pm from th« 
qU TOs°fnscldo i! ” 0, ?S e J“ r Dr ^ 

dmils U p m tltcarp,or/\ ejmbrow- 

raising "fault-finder”, f 
censorious person, snd a Wt . 0 
cheat because it Is a 
the shortest entry. The shortest 


Dictionary. 1 think Burchfield should 
include the most frequently spoken 
word in the language, sc, er. ■ 

I regret to have to tell, Peter Glare 
and the Oxford University. Press that 
their Herculean labours are not over 
vet. The Oxford Latin Dkthmry 
takes the language to the earnest 
recorded .wqrds to circa AD 200, 
when Christian Latin starts to take 
over, and the vast new . literature 
needs sped*! treatment. Next we 
need that special treatment. We also 
Seed a Shorter. Latin Dictionary, orte 
volume, bay a- thud trf the >be of. 
OLDi. for students starting Latin to 
have and to hold* os their own. But 
meanwhile, for, Jarge mercies anda 
great dictionary punas , agmus and 
Alleluia. V .... 

Philip Reward 


These new bilingual 1 ooJSaw 1 I 

dictionaries are compact, 1 _ I 

comprehensive, detailed j Ml|4U|CH i 

and up-to-date. They are | 

ideal for students. i tfvEflfCQI 

travellers end tourists. I 

162mm x 102mm, with I 

4(KH- pageB, each dictionary \ 

contains 10, 000 headwords I , 

and over 36,000 references. I 7l 

Companion dictionaries \ mmm ! * 

also provide grammatical I | 

information, pay special i^a wnsw ■ 

attention to modem p. i 11 ! ra • 
idiomatic expressions and I - I 

contemporary vocabulary • I I. 

anduscaynonymsto I fl|g|nn i 
explain meanings in context I 1 

and an extra -broad version \ 1 

of the International 1 CBflUnll 

Phonetic Alphabet to assist l HRMnln \ 

: Ail four volumes ora now l l 

on mIo in bookshops 1 | 

throughout the UK, the L 
Republic of Ireland ond 1 , i 

Western Europe. Lm ■. l .*. lM . . .. ' 

ISBN Fronoh 0 330 gflfidfi « 
ForMIdstatlBof . .. Spanish 0 330 260SO ( 


szSsz 





Ftonoh 0330268480 German 0330 26 W9 7 
Spanish 0 330 20360 0 . ftallan 0 380 29631 0 


onawiciiimu™, I REQUESTFORM ' 
pleoftecomp^tatha j piegw sond me details or the following; 

opposEte and send I D Language twoM O Travel baa Its C3 U let lotiarles 
it to; . J (pIsiiM tick os appropriate) ■ 

VrMDnii I Namo . 


Request Form I |—i , , . f~| _. 

opposite and send :• j W Language twoka LJ Tro 
It to: . .J fplenw Lick us appropriate). 

'Freepost | Namn ... 

|Ml!sn 

18-81 Caveya Place I 8 ch(taJ(Cqllegfl., 

LondolffSWlO 0PO ; adrfreaa 

W. 01-373 6070 j 


Postcode 





I 


42 


extra 


™ K TIMfcs kw^'ationai. supplement iu, s 


li .}:• ! 


'■ I 


Wings 



i : ( 


I •! I • 

]!.1 !' ;i 

i-.i- * M 

, : :• I 


Cotltns British Birds. By J Goodcrs 
and T Lambert. 

Collins £12.95. 0 00 219121 0. 

Owls. By E Hosklng. 

Pelham Books £12.95 

0 7207 1390 0. 

An Atlas of the Birds of Ihc Western 
Palaearctlc. By C Harrison. 

Collins £12.95. 0 00 29729 4. 

The Breeding Birds of Europe. By M 
Pforr and A Lfmbrunncr. 

Groom Helm £14.95. 0 7099 2013 X 


these pages. It is suggested that bird- 
listers in some of the inland States of 
Amcricn may record as many ns 90 
per cent of the possible nvifaune. 
‘‘But birders in Britain mid Ireland 


can expect no better J hot! 60 per cent 


'•I 


-. J ' ! ; 

• i ' .. 


. i 


Collins claim in their advertising that 
they have "one of the most beautiful 
and comprehensive books on the 
birds of Britain ever produced". Tit is 
is one blurb that docs not overstate 
its case for a major addition to the 
reference shelf that is at once a book 
for pleasure, for constant browsing, 
and for reliable information. 

Some 450 birds are described, with 
hundreds of colour paintings, draw- 
ings and maps illustrating every 
aspect of ornithology. A considerable 
team of experts has contributed 


expi 

material for the text by John Good- 


. ; ,'f 

» i 


by 

ers and paintings by Terence Lam- 
bert. 

An introduction delineates the aim 
and pattern of the whole. The emph- 
asis is on birds found in Britain and 


i } ; 


the total 495-odd birds that 
have been recorded, no less (linn III 
have occurred fewer than 10 times." 

This obviously mokes identification 
of all but the few score of most 
commonly found species n highly 
technical task. But every bird that 
breeds or winters in our islands, or is 
a regular visitor, is depicted here 
with a large painting accompanying 
details of appearance, song, habitat, 
breeding habits, diet ana distribu- 
tion. 'Hie more occasional, or rarer, 
sightings arc also dealt with, (here 
arc notes on nature reserves and 
other observatories, und on the law 
(especially of protection of birds), 
ana there is a helpful bibliography. 

Had it not been published almost 
simultaneously this spring, Eric 
Hosking's Owls must have token a 
major place in that bibliography. It 
is, without doubt, scheduled tor the 
hallmark “classic". The photography 


ns it mnv be to elect one of their 
splendid hooks to this cniicncc. The 
genius of the plates and (he informa- 
tion they convey, nil bucked by a 
most enjoyable and erudite text, 
must induce many renders to do nil 
they enn to preserve this endangered 


species. And there is sugc advice on 
tnc provision of nesting spaces (hut 
will help. In a word, superb. 


There arc photographs, over 400 
in all, of merit also in The Breeding 
Birds of Europe, where adult birds, 
their nests, eggs and chicks arc por- 
trayed in reliable colour. Some 150 
species arc dealt with, each descrip- 


tion being accompanied by a dis- 
tribution map and n table of data 


is superlative, and alongside a text of 


I i. 


Ireland. With only two species ende- 
mic (Scottish Crossbill and Red 


‘,3 

1.- 


• i. ' 


Grouse), nnd even these related to 
others on the mainland of the Euro- 
pean Continent, the range of birds 
on our islands is dependent on their 
mobility, on climate and, in some 
degree, simply on chance. 

There are thus full-time residents, 
regular and irregular migrants and 
occasional visitors, llicre arc some 


the highest distinction, from Dr Jim 
Flcgg, conveys every facet of what 
are to many the most appealing of 
birds. 

The colour and overall quality of 
many of the plates is, frankly, amaz- 


ing, while the patience and expertise 
necessary to obtain the ever-illumi- 


nating and fascinating shots is 
beyond the wit of most camera-own- 
ers. Everyone, however, can gain a 
deeper appreciation of (he character- 
istics, exploits nnd behaviour of owls 
of all types from this compilation. 


such as size, cull, breeding mul fledg- 
ing periods, and (he like. 'This first 
volume ("divers to auks") examines 
all types of sea-birds, fnlconiformes, 
gailitormes and their relations; a 
second volume will complete the 
gamut. 

Equally illuminating, and sound in 
the extreme for reference purposes, 
is an atlas of 639 species or birds in 
Europe, North Africa and the Mid- 
dle East. Maps in various colours 
indicate the summer, winter and nil- 
the -ye or- round resident patterns; 
they are each accompanied by a 
short text with thorough notes on 
status, climatic zones, habitat and 
habit. Again, the bibliography is 
commendable, while it is helpful to 
have a substantial index in two sec- 
tions, one of English names and the 
other carrying the corresponding sci- 
entific names. 


F W Kellaway 


,!!■ 


I 

■I. 


among tife mass of information in this to be IheTr magnum opus, hard 


Ihe Hoskin^ family could well fee| 


Illustration from "An Atlas of the 
Birds of the Western Palaearctlc “ 


f:*j . j Shepherd’s delight 


vn: 



Wild Flowers. By Marjorie Blarney 
nnd Richard Elder. 

Collins Gem Guides £1.50. U 00 
458801 0. 

Wild Herbs. A Field Quid*. By Jac- 
ques de Sloover und Marline Gow- 
sens. • • 

David and : Charles £6.95. 0 7153 
8221 7. 

A Field Guide to the Wttd Flowers of 
■ Britain and Europe. By Thomas 
Schauer and Claus Caspar!. 

. Collins £7.95. 0 00 219256 X. £4.95. 
0 00 219257 8. 

Plants of the British Isles, By Bar- 
bara Nicholson. 

Cbllins £7.95. 0 00 410416 1. 

Wild Flowers. The WHd Flowers of 
. Britain and Northern Europe. By 
Marjorie Blarney, Richard Fitter and 
Alastalr Fitter. 


Flick through .the excellent photo- 
aphs in dc Sloover and Goossens 
Herbs with their evocative 
backgrounds, several times if that is 
necessary to detect the leaves of 
Shepherd’s Purse amid the surround- 




Ing vegetation. The Ingeuulty of Die 
is fun; and the 


Collins £9,95. 0- 00 219757 X. FontU- 

.... 157 8.:-' ■ 


ita £5.95. 0 00 6364! 


> Take the {nodest little: weed growing 
. In the fast-CQptttcting grass verge by 
piy suburban front door. Trace - the 
sketch in Collins Gem Guide to Wild 


coded in formation 
uses for curing nose bleeds or fla- 
vouring salads arc of interest, for 
who Is not into allopathy, 
homoeopathy and aromatherapy 
those days? As a field guide the 
book lacks definition and references 
can be bnffllngly cryptic. Rare and 
poisonous plants Rrc sensibly 
omitted. ■ 

Follow carefully the steps set out 
In glossary, description of habitat, 
famdy characteristics' and key in 
Schauer 's Field Guide, nnd 
Shepherd's Purse will be identified 
among other brilliant drawings of the 
Cructferae. Is this procedure practical 
lit the field? And how long will the 



' paperback covers test? 
Search t 


. -Flowers by recognizing tho srjiall 


. four-petal led flowers and toothed 
• leaves. There , learn Its Latin name 



- 


Capsella bursa-pastoris, and enloy 
the innocent pleasure of knowing 
; iWhy it. is called Shepherd’*. Purse - 
; Just the: thing, to: delight a young, 
; child, vCp pack. descriptions: of nearly ■ 
. a quarter of our British flora -into. 

■ -.such -a ; tiny rfoftfiat :is . good;! value, 
'• even ;| f ' ratio tri: are mainly 

rt^trictedTto' dje. flowering, parts ot 

[*■ ftp ^Brits. r' v ■'£ : '!'■ ■ " • y- V. . • 


the double-page spread of 

Waste Oround in: Barbara Nicholson's Northern Europe' 
Plants of the British Isles. In' the 
front rank of its ecological peers 
grows Shepherd’s Purse,: one. of the 
rtiany intricate details In' the artist's 


comprehensive' vision of plants in 
their time and place. The book 


makes a good present for an inteUi 
nt youngster and - a useful . addition 
nv school- library.' 


on 





ir one's own 


I are 'made evident to| the' eye) and 
Similar spates ,• ajps; drawn ■ - on the' 



Fear of failure 


, : -S *.’.i 


I ■ '. 


Branching out 


Water- Hiy family. From “Wild Flow- 
era: The WUd Ftowfra of Britain arid 


same plate . to allow more careful 
comparison and identification. White 
flowers are shown on plain grey 
backqrounds. The scale is consistent 
ll pages. The illustrations ore 


robust, botanlcally explicit arid of 
great ^sensitivity. . Bach plate is a jo> 
r: the whole la a: worthy, exemplar o 
the English tradition in plant illustra- 


tlbrvThiijfa the book 
'library., '• V-'-r-; 1 ;. •- . ■ - 

-iV ^?liz«beth Plum 


. . (iKUINIVJ.W 

1 By Drivid Stott. 5 . -v 

i Ha^ranri ftdw £S,j|St .06-3l^3i91 t ' 6,. 


Purlsts shun jargon, belieyera chant 
/Jt Hkt? a -toantra;- m industry has 


i. : grown fat explaining It to- likcB pf yOu ' whi 
1 and (he,. A dictJoftaW of human. be/: per 
. Jiavioiif , partltulariy a' selectlVe one,- sta 


needs to be intelligently conceived to 
disarm .the inevitable questions,' why 


this? Why not: that? 


In the case Of a dictionary is slight, 
;nsive «s this ond, sucii duea-: 


and expensive 


are especially pointed- - U la 
porvcise to. exclude flooding hud in 
trojectiOn WhCn projectib’fl arid aver- 
sion therapy -arc- Include Difficult 
coheepts 'are ; inadequately •defined. 
That Vogue - ^rdparadignt, meaning 
. that which .create*, categories (htoi}gh 

•Which the Worid(,' or 1 aspect* of It, are 
rcelved, becomes, according to 
att; fa -detailed example or MOD* 
EL y On- turning to model, the dedi- 
cated nurse, student or budding* so- 

book was 
SOCIAL 
wftorie.be- 


Trecs. ny Barid More nnd Alnttalr 
Fitter. 

Collins Gem Guides £ l .5(1. U tKt 
458X113 7. 

The Macdonald Knt-yclopcdln or 
Trees, 

Macdonald £4.45. (1 35r> IM574 tl. 
The Trees of Britain nnd Northern 
Kuropc. By Alan Mitchell. Illustrated 
by John Wilkinson. 

Collins £3.95. II (X) 2190354. £6.95. 0 
(10 219037 0. 

The Gardener's Book of Trees. By- 
Alan Mitchell. 

Dent £14.95. 0 4WI 04403 6. 


The Gem guides arc arming the few 
handbooks which really arc small 
enough to be curried inconspicuously 
in u pocket. Trees is a thoroughly 
useful little book, snappily written hy 
Alastair Fitter with strong illustra- 
tions by young David More. I'm sure 
the few minor inaccuracies - the odd 
page reference; the flowers of the 
Norway Maple, correctly described 
ns upright, but set upside down - will 
be corrected in the second edition. 
There is plenty of sound infnrmotion 
here in a small and reasonably priced 
package. 

The simple and dear lunguugc of 
the Gem guide compares well witli 
the Macannaltl Encyclopaedia of 
Trees. This book is the American 


and. though necessarily terse h* 
personality m n - and some cZ 
mcnis which set you back. “NqS 
s«n Cypress in Britain has yet 2 
ped growing" and of the Jg 
lh.nisn.ids, lire tallest is already 1 
metres! The collaboration with John 
Wilkinson as artist Is a happy 
the illustrations are excellent and it li 
the best designed tree book 1 have 
airne across, skilfully reconciling the 
differences of senle of the different 
elements of identification. All th* 
native and naturalized trees are m> 
chided and there are details of a very 
wide range of pork and garden trees 
Tliis is hy fur the best compact book 
on tree identification. Minute atten- 
tion hns been paid to every detail- 
from the illustrated contents list 
through to the indexes, simple-to-use 
keys, selected silhouette shapes fora 
winter identification, and lists and 
whereabouts of specimen trees. 

From the same author but a diffe- 
rent publisher comes The Gardener's 
Bonk of Trees a handsome and prac- 
tical book. It is nicely planned and 


written though I was sorry to see a 
repetition of some of the author'! 


version of nil Italian original, only 
slightly (and inconsistently) altered 


as a concession to the English mar- 


ket. There is a perplexing note about 
a “colour bar identification which 


appears to have been dropped from 
this edition; there is no London 


Plane or Grey Poplar; nnd both com- 
mon and scientific names differ from 
(hose with which we ure familiar. 

Furthermore you need advanced 
“botanesc” to begin to understand 
the text which is practically incom- 
prehensible. The book's strong point 
is its photographs, ninny of them of 
trees unfamiliar to European readers 
(to whom, however, it will come as u 
surprise to find a picture of u Nor- 
way Maple with its characteristic 
flowers, illustrating the text for the 
Sycamore). 

The Trees of Britain and Northern 


Europe is n. splendid achievement. 
The text by Alan Mitchell 


coursu, thorougldy 


is, of 
knowlcdgeublu 


more striking phrases (the "canyon 
between skyscrapers” habitat of the 
Ginkgo) which takes the zest out of 
the reading. Gardeners requirements 
are foremost in the introductory 
essays on tree planting, history, land- 
scaping und special purpose trees and 
in the main section which is an 
alphabetical list of garden trees. 

A list of specialist tree nurseries 
would also have been useful. I perso- 
nally disagree with some of Alan 
Mitchell's ideas and historical inter- 
pretations but this book is undeni- 
ubly full of sensible and informed 
advice and I was particularly glad to 
see the attention given to the value 
of trees to birds and insects, especial- 
ly the note that Silver Lime flowers 
are fatal to bees. It Is nice to find 
that trees usually ignored by gar- 
deners ure included In this horticultu- 
ral book. The Wild Service, a wood- 
land native, is Included, as well as 14 
vuriclies of Lnwson Cypress, and 
among the 27 spcclos of Mnple is tM 
native Field Maple of our hedge- 
rows. Even the purist s bite nojr, ine 
Sycamore, has n few kind words salfl 
for it. 

Francesca Greenoak 


Frontiers underfoot 

nrirwrr- ■ ! ■: | I)R | r om the Earth's basic 

The Cambridge Encyclopedia of an d ehemlcnl composition, tnroup" 
Earth Sciences. Edited by David ti. tho gross morphological effects of urn 
Smith. enormous forces nrlslng from the ID- 

Cam bridge Univorsily Press £19.95. 

0 521 23900 1. 


Bursting on to (ho geological scene 
in tiro early sixties, the theory of 


enormous forces nrlslng ----- , 

lerucllon of giguntic P ,ntes 
Earth's crust, to, the mdiP'JJ 
lotlioru of interactions be ween I 


Its surtaco environments and the W* 
rnts they have supported past m 


•' ’ A-- hfetiftiliri* iir rinmhU fehrivfcrar “ e ' - pofaiccl- tl ■ fa fhaviour ,1s -Closely observed. Bee 

S.; %2!?5Lif 1 Mywwr. peryjsise exriluW flooding bud in- ' [ MODELLING”. ' : 

The - author includes phrases, like 
vfesr ofi failure and fear of success* 
'..which may need discussing* but .hard- 
ily require . a definition. . One con- 


:; Jliides'that Statf has a low opinion of 
' his .intended aUdiendc. but; lovers: of 



.intended audlendc, but ; lovprs _ _ 
! jargon ) will find some choice /speci- 
' mops. ; My favourite Is 1 chunking, or 

“a way-of groupir- * 

• lion into units or .. 
imbmorizlrig them”. 


grouping Item* of inforina 
ri chunk* as 1 an aid to 



plate tectonic* was easily tho most 
important single conceptual udvanco 
towards a workable hypothosis of 


how the Earth behaves os a dynami- 


cally integrated system. Not only did 
It fo 


orce geologists to reinterpret the acquisition. “'T* .T Vdnba! ** 

S -ocesses underlying- the phenomeno auo# B ro now used on a gip®" ^ 
ey had until then merely been able Jo evaluate the distributlono^JJJ^ 


forms they 
prorent. /* 

Particularly oppeallng ls the wj* 
asis placed throughouton thj PjgJ. 
xlvc role of sopmstlcatedjs 
in establishing new methods 

acquisition. As tn“ny of th«« al scak - 


to observe, 


impetus for 


it also formed tho major Purees and thc pownJJJ 1 
■ the remarkable trans- nolural hazards like ,n . XTabi 


□ lit lull v» 

jtontl0l 


natural 


forination of a rather dry conglomer- earthquakes and volranow, 
ate .of related disciplines into the figurc H largely in * 

ouping of chapters .. 

fluences of tnan. ^ 

Despite Its range an 


vital amalgam that now constitutes 
the .Earth science*. Indeed, so much 
of an upheaval.dld it induce that it is 


or an upncavai.aia it induce that it is 
.now hailed .as rae primp justification 
for thfa fresh appraisal of the state of 
thO Held. . 


ho*.' 


ever. 


claim to. being' an cn ^°PjJJ[ rttate 
literal xna. a wf SSs-ieft^! 
their own . conce^tua^ 


By briefing his expert and enthu- 
siastic, band of essayist* tq concern encea, aided orily^ hy l.w^chap* 

themselves, not so much with ore- allusion to material n r”, ure iWi 
renting a distillation, of past wisdom, ter8 . i n fact, , the only of 
a* with conveying the current preoc- MU \d distinguish It w » .. -llllll0 uj 


conveying 
. . is. and p .. 
their own areas of rorearc 
Smith, has virtually assured 
of lta: most inspiring asset. For what 


Smith, has virtually assured his book 
nspirin 

comes across abovtfail else is a clear 


P«oo. could distinguish '' ” 


cupations and projected ^ oa J a P? reference 1*.* 

\ book av iy case going 
r '" hn * neatly packaged ... 

casual reader* unwilling 


sense of the excitement .engendered 
by working with a fertile predictive 
framework . at nowly acquired 
academic ffontlirtl, 


whole sections, j a i r iv itif^ 

the prose 

n»l, and ra.oil drffto , “J^5 


As 


In 27 lengthy chapter* liberally 
imaginatively 1 designed 
diagrams and man^Mcefient colour 


seeded with 


the book presents an 
lira succession' of topics 


terms are explained In a J 'ideal 

book should prove to be a rleveb 

Introduction for s uden^ 

from' sixth-form upwards- • j.-. 

Robbie VJd^ 




THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


Doctor in the 
house 

The Macmillan Guide to Family hj-health, will find this manual a 
Health. Edited by Dr Tony Smith. !° l ' nd practical investment, and 
Macmillan £14.95. 0 333 27870 4. u^! lich w,n S00n earn the price of 


I Keeping 
the body 

beautiful 


Collins Family Medical Handbook 
Edited by Ian A. G MacQuccn. 
Collins &95. 0 UQ 434322 0. 


«h will smn earn the pri’ce of 

wS' &SS £* u 

cover will develop at Macdonald £9.55. 0 356 08588 0. 


r 1 " 1 - - ---- - - »ver will develop a‘. MK,SanM 0 356 08588 0. 

Dr Tony Smith - recent Medical ™ not have before r n , 

Correapondent of The Times, and "S deference to its J n oct ‘" l ?™ s “f! | y f d '?« society, 

DeputyEditor of the British Medical thc P ub|lsh ers of this SJS ™ “2, pnests as our 

journal - has forged the contribu- HjSSj 1 " 8 ^^nipted to cram S C 2feH Ie,1 " 5 f to 
Hons from a diverse range of special- : nt0 amount of information their sleentao ^i mu f h, . or reI y 9 n 

ists and OPs into n manual which is 2®, ““““t of space. 2X !“H t p,ll , s ' ,^ nd we «t in 
both comprehensive nnd compre- r Qr rf , ?p , « looks something like the h ea i t u nf^n^hr.J^® 11 - 08 °I er , the 
Sensible. U)rds Prayer wntten on the back of SI 0 !,? “stead of the , 

The section on health prophylnxis w here S fhiu 3 a f P ' dia 8 rfl nu, ur souls ' I 

may seem de trop to the hculth- JJ^on washliS 'Vheif f *5,^® h 0 And 50 Ever y woman's Ltfeguide 

conscious individuals to whom this Lp th( , J J-SUi* ! hc,r h ®o ds after us- Jo* come to pass; as thick as a Bible, 
book will appeal, but the self-diagno- ^ Jf t0llet ) or complicated in the though rather more lavishly Mu* 
iis flow charts will be acceptable Th^stiltetl vtonri.. . trated lts author Is the embodiment 
even lo the most avid colour supple- tered «hh S?'' ! “P™""' ■ Mgh prios- 


raiir»Ttasr^ test"* ? = 

over-reass'uranM 6 * of whom most people 

sisrsyjsss.tgs 

mss&ats® S”~s ll = sntsSSsa? 


from one horrific side view of a disenSf ¥? ren on 

disembodied female pelvis under- doted^md k «nH ♦ y . ° Ut ‘ 

going torture by instrumentation. is obtained S trea,m . e . nt 
In the main, the information on !! “me curious medic- 

sr-, stsw tata 

SBS of^elll patients"* with lisr^eSSlptomT'™ 5 'll" 


. , HUM 0V1 VJVWU 4L 

^utar intervals. As Dr Stoppard 

"Your body is a beautiful efficient 
machine built to a design that is 
beyond the skill of most engineers, 
so it is worth looking after it, 
checking it over regularly to make 
sure that it is in good working 
order, and doing regular repair 
and maintenance Jobs whenever 
necessary.” 

Dr Stoppard tells her readers that 


Dr Stoppard tells her readers that 

Jp out of surgery hours. I hc family Th e P ntenttans ' ^Mhc Skhprc ‘heir gK refuse to conduct regular 

doctor is sometimes depicted as h are honournb rThe hare aTte nored lhen " il is y our » 

heroic figure prepared to incise car to produce a health Rukle whK find som l one who wil1 • The advice 
drums In coses of middle ear infee- hoth comDrehcn ve g ind cheao fil ay 1 0t be lhat t0 fol,ow - Un- 
don. and treat warts with liquid nil- Mas ns a S he li S l,ke ‘hf .■ Americans and Canadians, 
rown. Many GPs would prefer to have’ difficuky dy ng eSveTv oS most British doctors believe routine 
refer such patients lo hospital spe- thhbook ) u 'a 5 fite' to famXhe^kh 0 " healthy people are 

ts-.-s--. Sir, £$ G&S jJVJrsde -as 

SS^tSSSSifeSI i *. u*. -w. 1. 1™ 

■ft! 1 ° “ n n swer ' hati thc time, [heir aspirations. 5 annual cervical smears taken from the 

®y man searching for it single uee of 25 s and states (he risk of the 

it. n,e f um guide him through „ •• disease is particularly high in the 25-34 

»ne uncharted seas of health and Laurence J Knott age group. She may well be right, but 

— — : her readers may find it hard to per- 

. ' 1 suade their family doctors to perform 


suaae rncir taml |y doctors to pertorn 

A natural choice 

• • Ui UA vUV/lVW centra tc on older women unless 

IT" ' 1 ■k..-j==».-=Ks«=B5s= — — ■ ■ — 1 there are special circumstances (eg a 

ine Medicine Men. By John Lloyd j least three pregnancies, or a history 

rtaier. V I of Benital hemes V Ano GPs are nnl 

PWftoflwgn UL50. 0 423 D019II 
6. £3.50. 0 423 U0IM) 9. 

Sianway V * h'ledidne, jty Andrew i 

oTfi' 2 369 X DlX>k5 ngS - 

l l cr 5f s l ' n 8 nwnrcncss of nltcrnn- 
medicine has been reflected In 

to?" 1 t ?lf vls 1 l j >n .,°! ld rfKjio program- 
fuLr Jf} e Medicine Men . by John 

ttS- ,. Fr<ISer ,s bascd on ‘he scries of - .. . J t 

nnmc h c produced for file A and cut your toenails, and how to 

22“ television. Mast alternative “ ^ ae&JKme \ extricate yourself from a husband 

jjJjfPf 1 ■» "holUlIc” in that they ‘ V« 1 who batters you. ' 

sSSw 

Stefe*! S7 11 ”. L o 3 d Fr “ er S3 •£* nart chUdbi^h, 

SWf PwW 1«STS!S H.m.nH “Vfrv.rt, b»l can b. 


I 


suade their family doctors to perform 
annual smears if they are under 35. The 
department of health guidelines con- 
centrate on older women unless 
there are special circumstances (eg at 
least three pregnancies, or a history 
of genital heroes). Ana GPs are not 
paid to perform such checks on 
younger women, although family 
planning clinics are more willing to 
cany out the procedure. 

But If you believe in body malnte- 
nance and are looking for a Life- 
guide, then Miriam Stoppard's book 
has to be good value. It covers 
everything from anal sex to ageing, 
from pregnancy to prolapse, and 
from alcoholism to acupuncture. It 




asyrt* -* »SS Fbwo "Th* Mwfctae by John gOTi’daSlKTii 

! css d .' S - y SS5 natural childb^lb, 

of notu ral therapies , , « ve ry good, but can be extremely 

Bf SirVtSS” 0 a I 1101 * suitabIe basis Alternative- therapies demand Da i n far. Sbe wrote that she bad 
dr. ■ raRn rapdern orthodox rriedi- more of the patient In terms of tak- ^Derienced both a painful and a 

Fra«r*. . ing responsibility for his own health, 


ven to nlzes that natural therapies .have 
it, and great potential and that 
mi 



niicu, ohu 


Colin Crewdson 


You might be surprised by. . . 

My First Encyclopedia 



It $ a completely new 10- volume encyclopedia for 6-9 year olds 
?ge h ^up &CShIng,yneW Bpproach 10 P rescn ‘ J, ng information to this 

‘ “Pi “-n— «- ^ 

’ wo'rk ^S™bM P ' n " Cnd ' d - ’° CnC0Unlg ' Cn<tUiri ' ^ filrth ' r 

‘ ch “ ted “ d ,tied ou ‘ “ ,he chMroora b y » 

* It is handsomely illustrated in colour and black and white 

* The first two volumes are published in July. 

Volume 1 Me and You 

Volume 2 Living Together 

SSKSSc urpris ' you ,00 -° nly £2 - 95 for 32-page 


You might expect that . . . 

Starters Dictionaries 

compiled by Betty Root 




f StotaiHed K 

ii Dlcltonary 


■" /?>[ | f Dictionary 

% r— 


would be... • 

* .. 1 l. V: 

ideal for project and language work, ' Yv.K'* % 

imroducmg a wide range of vocabulary |_ 

* fon to use with lots of Ideas for playing with words 

* colour-folly illustrated 

* good value 

Starters Red Dictionary for 5-6 year olds £2.95 
Starters Blue Dictionary for 6-7 year olds £ 2.95 
Starters Green Dictionary for 7-8 year olds £3,50 

Wm^aSl™lrf^ d rt ™.! he,r °"' n 0r m COn|Unction 
aaStarter& U 0118111 ® Xpect ' rcaUy> fit)m a sc™* “ well-established 


[. school, trains, 


Please send me inspection copies': ;■ . 

My First Encyclopedia .. 

Volume I Me and You 
Volume? Living Togethfcr 
My First Eneyclopeciia Foster/Leafiet' 

Starters Dictionaries 
Starters Red Dictionary 
Starters Blue Dictionary 
Starters Green Dictionary 
Starters Dictionaries Postcr/Leafiet 


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Send to: Publicity Department, Macdonald Educatio 
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yt -. I*-;!- 








I 


Heinemann 

English 

Dictionary 

Chief Editors: 

KATHERINE HARBER and 
GEOFFREY PAYTON 
Chief Adviser: 

Dr. W. A. GATHERER 

‘The best school dictionary I have ever seen 1 
'An admirable and useful dictionary -layout 
aids comprehension without limiting 
vocabulary’ 

'It pays attention to the real needs and study 
habits of secondary school pupils' 


Heinemann 

English 

Dictionary 


These commendations 
from an adviser and two 
heads of English have been 
typical in the three years 
since the Heinemann 
English Dictionary first 
appeared. Other good 
dictionaries have been 
published, but none 
combines clarity, 
modernity and educational 
relevance so completely. 

Special features 
Include 

* 1340 pages 
Tk dean uncluttered layout 
* k ease of reference with no 
symbols or abbreviations 
it emphasis on current usage 

Excellent value at £2,75 


For inspection copies or details of our current specfai offer 
on this dictionary please contact 

M) Heinemann Educational Books 

vL37 22 Bedford Square, London WC I B 3HH 


^ 1 1 I I S I RA 1 1 1) DIC TIONARY 


\LD RELIGIONS 




extra 

Emerging giant 


The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Afri- 
ca. Edited hy Roland Oliver mid 
Michael Crowder. 

Cambridge University Press IIK.50. 

(] 521 2311% V. 

Whether nnc is disenchanted that the 
end nf cntoninlisin in Africa Ims not 
lie raided the millennium, nr whether 
one accents (he uuict satisfaction of 
sonic old colonial hands that tilings 
might have been much worse, there 
is no duuht that African affairs still 
exert n powerful fascination. 

Our concern arises partly front our 
recent colonial past and partly from 
the fact that this emerging giant of a 
continent is still undergoing profound 
change. Another factor, as the 
hridge Encyclopedia of Africa indi- 
cates in its final chapter, is black 
consciousness, something with which 
we all have to come to terms, 
whether we live in Africa nr not. 

The encyclopedia is a substantial 
arid attractive addition to the existing 
general reference works on Africa. 
Serious and scholarly in approach, it 
was compiled by more than a hun- 
dred contributors, including many 
familiar mid distinguished names. It 
is not, however, an encyclopedia in 
the conventional sense, but rather un 
organized and cross-referenced col- 
lection of articles on African themes. 
In its 492 pages, the only alphabetic- 
al sections arc a 19-pagc fisting of 
the most numerous and more famous 
of Africa’s 1,000 or so ethnic groups, 
and a 43-page country section giving 

f sotted accounts of recent political 
i i story.. 

The scope of the encyclopedia is 
wide. There nrc sections on the 
Physicul Environment, Peoples, in- 
cluding an excellent summary or the 
evidence from Africa about Mini’s 
origins, The African Past, u 134-page 
narrative account of Afrienn history 
up to the end of colonialism, and 54 
country articles, as mentioned above, 
that detail events since indepen- 
dence or, in the case of South Africa, 
since 1961. There arc also sections 
on Government, Utilization of Nntu- 
rni Resources, Political Economy, 
Society, Religion, Arts and Recrea- 
tion (which is spendldly illustrated), 
and a final chapter on Africa and the 
World. 

A fuli index, which is placed 
rather oddly at the start of the book, 
and a bibliography with around 700 
entries are other features. There ure 
44 useful mans, many In colour, and 
much statistical information in the 
form of tables or artwork. The 
photographs are exceptional. They 
number more than 350, one-third of 
which are In colour, and they liavu 
been selected not merely for decora- 




, ,,K 1 IMKS W"" ATIONAI. SUPPLEMENT 21.SJJ 

Map history^ 

Penguin 13. W. 0 14 0 708 34 o. 

I hc 1‘cngutn ,W/«w of Recent His, on 
bongs up to date the story started 


vvVJK.,, Tv 


In the rubber coils. Scene - The 
Congo “Free” Stale. Cartoon from 
Punch 

tion hut to illuminate the subjects 
they illustrate. 

And yet there are some strange 
omissions. The Arts and Recreation 
section includes a lively piece on the 
art and architecture of black Africa, 
but there is no mention of the 
Islamic nrt and architecture of North 
Africa. The chapter on The African 
Past includes hingraphic.il inserts 
on 15 African statesmen, including 
llnilc Selassie, Jnmo Kcnyntta. Hen- 
drik Verwoerd and Eduardo Mond- 
lane. But would it not also have 
been useful to provide more back- 
ground information on leaders who 
have to face the problems uf Ihc 
eighties, such us Samora Machei, 
Robert Mugabe and P W Botha? 

The emphasis throughout the en- 
cyclopedia is on history, which is 
hardly surprising in view of its two 
distinguished general editors. Hut 
this docs mean that geographers gel 
short shrift. For instance, (here me 
four passing references to Momii 
Kilimanjaro, hut nowhere are we 
told its height, thut it is mi extinct 
volcano, or that it is Africa’s highest 
mountain. Further, although there is 
u short section on iirhiini/nlion, a 
matter or conside ruble Importance in 
contemporary Africa, we are not 
given the populations of Cairo, 
Nairobi, Johannesburg, or uny other 
city for that matter, let alone de- 
scriptions of their growth and con- 
temporary problems. 


Perhaps it would have been more 
advisable to include articles provid- 
ing basic geographical, demographic 
and economic data fur cnch country, 
instead of those cmintty unities, 
mentioned above, which are con- 
cerned only with recent political his- 
tory. 

Keith Lye 


Different worlds 


;The Observer's World Alias. By John 
Bartholomew. 

Frederick Warne £1.95. 0 7232 1624 
X. 

The Orbls Pocket Encyclopedia of the 
World. 

Orbis £2.95. 0 85613 339 6, ' ■ 


The Observer's World Atlas is the 
ninety-first text In their series of 
pq&et books. The series has coveted 
a wide -ramie of topics building up an 
encyclopedia of popular subjects. To 
ado a world atlas to the senes seenjs 
ari attractive proposition but in prac- 
tice the result is disappointing. The 
niap StjHe is best described its ttadi- 


RELIGIOUS EDUCATION PRESS 

Hennack Hoad Exeter EXZ 0RP 


tional reflecting geographical studies 
of hqlf a cpnlury ago. The maps 
Which We're /compiled for use at lais 
ger . scales haye In many cases suf- 
fered badly i In' the reduction and the. 
nfemes of rivers and smaller towhs on- 
a number of pages are.: barely read, 
able. ' There are too many names 
printed, (nthe wrangtypeface for 
such a publlcatlbn. -The gazetteer 
omits many, of thq features, which 
abRhar bn-tfie maps. The reasons for 
inclusion : or exclusion of names is 
obaedre and the effectiveness of th 


■G, n /t* gazetteer as a reference source Is 
Adas. By John f lmlled . 

c ft -jiio 7116 0rbis Pocket Encyclopedia of 

5. 0 7232 1624 Wdrld, ori tlio other hand, is a 
■ _ JU much better buy. It is full of statistic- 

^clopedia of the a j information and facts relating to 
„ 0 A , the many countries of the world. The 

as* o. i daWi man y 0 f which are based on 

j ami J roturns for * he years around 1977, 

d Atlas Is the cover administration, the economy, 
heir, senek of industry and communications, There 
has coveted |& a summary, of facts and figures for 
building up m each continent and a more detailed 
ar subjects; To breakdown for each country. Pre- 
he senes seeips pared In Czechoslovakia by Kartog- 
on but in prats rabble, there is little political bias - 
ppotntlng, The references to NATO - as a military 
Bribed- fis ttadi- and doIIHcaI n-niin in cnnlraat to the 


" r,l, P s U P «* the story started bv 
us predecessors on uncient, mediev- 

'"I 11 n ,n ‘tern history. The theme is 
nnmiiiiilly the "differentiation and 
evoliiimn of European society" but 
ilu-ie is very little about society here 
ami a great deal about frontiers, war 
ami diplomacy. The story is told 
chronologically, and with a scintilla- 
mg mastery of events. Flashing 
round the European capitals, the au- 
thor makes even the confused year 
of 1H4N seem intelligible, and shows 
us a revolution to all who suffer 
f M nn the imprisonment of events in- 
side O level topic compartments 
(Eastern Question, Italian Unifica- 
tion, 2nd Empire, 3rd Republic) - 
the interrelationship of developments 
in Europe as a whole. It is a gripping 
narrative, precisely illustrated by the 
maps on every right-hand page. 

With a fast sternly thumb flick 
through the hook you can animate 
them like cartoons and watch in mo- 
tion the. rise and fall of empires; 
Turkey fragments, Germany forms, 
expands, collapses, and Russia 
throughout spreads slowly and inex- 
orably westwards. All thm diplomacy 
hy Met ten rich and Palmerston, Bis- 
marck and Disraeli, couldn't slop her 
western roll; she never took Constan- 
tinople. hut her influence finally 
reached west of Berlin. It was the 
iron fist of Stalin, Colin McEvedy 
claims, which drew on the map these 
last great Russian gains, ana “cre- 
ated a whole new range of demog- 
raphic, political and economic facts . 

Since then frontiers have become 
stable, lie suggests, and includes no . 
further maps between 1945 and the 
present day. Hut the echoes of Ihc 
demands tor liberalism and auton- 
omy which resounded through 
Europe in 1K4H cun still sometimes 
ho heard, in Hungary, in Czechoslo- 
vakia. in IHtluml. it would be sad to 
believe thev won't one day once 
again cause the map to be redrawn. 

Jessica Saraga 

Illustrated Allas of Iho Modern 
World. Hy W I) Townson 
Longman £4.95. (I 5 H2 39128 8. 

'litis hook is u bit like the Holy 
Roman Empire, which wusnl holy, 
or Unman, or nn Empire, gnimw 
"illustrated Atlas of the Modern 
World*’, it is certainly illustrated, and 
dries deni with mosl or the worw. 
but if you really want mi min*. ■ « J 
you think modern means coniempw 
ary. thou forget il. . h . 

it starts in about 1760 and . Mj. 
double page spreads on se 
ionics, The Industrial Jkwwwj 
Tile First World War. 

Depression, and so on. Injcrspen« 
arc five simplified political m PL,. . 
the world at intervals up jo 
over-simplified in some ca5&s, 

Russia, for instance, ; 

patently ..already 


anu me rui • .jjiikw., 

insets in the text contemlng po^ 
ai topics, biograpiues, J4bl« 

ovents, and wm ® l 8 ^ a l ,er ,i? H lf s0 iSif 
show more detail and also e P w / 


show more detail and also o p ^ 
brave if rather bizarre Here 

wards a cultural ftoqj 

Beethoven gens ba^fel'y . \ \ 

the Balkans 
V,st Prussia" . 


and political group in contrast to the 
Warsaw Parities. a military and poli- 
tical union for defence snow a rare 
lapse In -what is otherwise an objec- 
tive report. The 80 supporting maps 
are clear and in general uncluttered, 
having been designed for the scale or 

B ublication. The Ipdex contains ail 
ie geographical names which appear 


on the ntBps*: If you are looking for 
an atlas that aerially fits into your 
pocket, then Jierc is one and more 
besides. •. 


Vast Prussian . neimoi ^ 

over Ireland, and soffle ^K goW, 

of the Himalayas, west 

desert, neSUing lik« » 

immense “late lBth-cenuiry_.pt> 

p5 Whit is all odds up Wi ^ 
surprising in 60 

more than two \££ J £*> 

world to cover. iS^seMCTv^ f 
while it’s less of an atlasjn ^ 
history book, U s book- 

lory book than a don ’t mat: 

In these terms, om’ssious don 
tor; what matters ^ siyte, ^^ 
it's a winner. Whats mor . 


0 


■Di 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5,82 


Winning w ords Figures of speech 

The Oxford Senior Dictionary. Com- JSSPt such w ords. The extent m ± V11 


extra 


The Oxford Senior Dictionary. Com- 
plied by Joyce M. Hawkins. 

Oxford University Press £3.75. 
0 19 9102228. £2.50. 0 19 91(122] X 
non-nel school edition. 


Tfie current academic year seems t 
be the Year of the Dictionary, one i 
n.hii-h rai'nhnw dclieht is the kevnni 


: mmm 


01 Good EnSllsh: A 

McKa.kS| elU U, ' 8e ' B ' S - G 
Macmillan £2.95. 0 333 30883 2. 


pect foul play. Dogs bite, hens lay, 
cow give milk, bulls give chase, and 
apostrophes are carcfolly placed in 
the geese s eggs and the mice’s tails. 
As soon as a grammatical concept 

nJt J r °S“ ced " “ A Participle is a 
part-verb - we are plunged into 
demonstrations of the confusion and 
clumsiness occasioned by its misuse. 

are brought along in 
order to be banished, among tnem 
ac/iia/Zv, awfully, terribly, frightfully, 
f^ntbly really, definitely, fimiiie, 

£ °A W £ rry A t’ random selec- 
non or undefined homonyms lends, 

wemht to the author's insistence that 
readers should consult other dic- 
tionaries, especially if they wish to 
answer such questions as *Wh*t Is a 

poHor^ 0nd " Who are ,he hoi - 

£Mr McKaskiil sets great store by 
the expression “// is I", which lie 
a n . ds °l! Pages 27, 56. 63 and 71. 
viradgnnd lives on in his repetition 


!» trap". 


> v «ly ?“E!!f “t- “Sh no; a diction- 


by a ramoow ausi-cover, men the <> n i 72 '-?. “ ,UU31ll is in addition to 
Umnm New Generation Dictionary u Sl !! y - nervous) laugh”. 
S smart rainbow lettering, and are m a i„ Si? adin * ‘S'™ 
now Oxford decorates similnrlv the al tn , . mo , ns ' su eH as "get 


wim smaii laiiivwn anu are imnw c „hr(:,..v #5 CI mere 

now Oxford decorates similnrlv the al , n ^ 5 °t ns ,’ su ™ 85 "8 et 

hard-wearing but glossy cover of the m ’ in S"’ 1 ® ''"P and here the 
school edition of its Senior Diction- u Gr \ £ nc { e ,n ^mat from the 
on. The resemblance to Longman is anlitJ - from tfie ab «nce of 
meant to be more than superficial: f ort j pSL 1S »u pparen j in thfl t Ox- 
both admit to employing u survey ol indndilm stan L dard fo ™ of 

GCE and CSE texthooks in the pro- maj,. ," e _ H f n hrasal . verb s under the 
cess of compilation, nnd both are ratP V than “ sepa- 
ihus aimed at the same age-group. m a ic e , lh tJ' j’ he clan ly of the type 
But whereas the New Generation " m n n ? de ;errent to quick 

Dictionary sees its clientele as “older ni nuc * Intere stingly Oxford em- 
children and young adults", the Ox- rhnLh r S i-« e P nnler ^ the NGD, 
ford Senior's emphasis on their scho- c i P1r |r JJS' 7 erei at -JP erha Ps slightly 
larS status is evident throughout the no _ ar fT; !^P e ' f 5 c ? ) 1 * ie notes on us- 
production. ?K: 'produced by the symbol fl and 

Of the 760 pages. 753 are devoted S? 1 S l 2.f 0m "S n confusio ps ("gour- 
lo the definitions of over 45.000 7.™k rme [ 8 ra ,9 inia, 'cal points 

words, with the only material rele- Li: ^ fl b ® r of , dat . a * “media*) and 
... . , origins, are valnnM* .l. 


irnr.nl r ■•■uauiiic pariS Ot 

2nS , nS lire r of „ s P eech - common 
rionTan^ 1 ; S nS f ci % I, Sf 

2yff^ h 5S^35 

T^^."SKSSE 

of peasants, hunters, beggars, thieves 

SL« a w ervants, c, in ^ hich mat *y 

b!oom . m Spring. Silence is 
S ' pracnce , perfect, and 
8^ immwrx is a desirable aualitv. 


er s Plant dai Gr^ 

Ke arrangements 


°l‘ H° rs ? s are quadrupeds Sepa- 
rate sections are devoted to Or- 
aS* 1 ""’ CHchds, Hackneyed 
phrases, Journalese. Redundancy and 

S'empH^d' 2 ' 1 ’ ° f Whi<:h is c °P ,ou ^ 
. Australian criticism of sexist bias 
in man-made language evidently cuts 
™ ,ce L flt Geelong Slate College 
US i£ e * uth ? r is Vice Principal. 

lh X 69 exercises that follow Zeug- 
»in the representative human pro- 
22? » always masculine singiflar. 
Femaies are judged by their oppear- 
ance and characterized by domestic- 
ity: Jane is more attractive than her 

iTme^y Vr Ul) girb lovt < ,n ‘ KU - 

Hon - Pshaw'" - nnd felt ready to 

fill* OAVrnnl f J . 


/nJjL ‘Si?,. t j ltie 1 , wa B s searching 
f °f. 11 suitable Inter jec- 
Hon - Pshaw'." - nnd felt ready to 

corrcc , 1 il em from Exercise 
3Je, to sum tip the experience; (Ugh? 
Ah/ Bravo!) That is bad news. 

Marion Glastonbury 


lllbklillU, t-UUIllIIC* Ol ic .mil. I . "I-m 

the world and chemical elements: rL°I!lS ^P c - a of m ? sl “ dlc h°naries 
abbreviated forms such as "GMT" u r ; r S y ’, ls et y mo, °gy : perhaps it 
are included in the main text. The LrES ^ 8 enerat ‘on 
number of specialist words which it ; f epri , classical background, but 
boasts is certainly impressive, and it «n do much to 

undoubtedly stresses the literary uses SS ,ev « JJe aim of al] educational 
of language where the NCI) stressed Irv^niff 10118 wh,ch a diction - 
the spoken. It is interesting therefore SIL!i.C? e baW r p 5 ramount: t0 make 
ibat its definition of “Georgian" is 1 ^lw rC /-r nd ? llt, n . 
confined to the period of the first n J a ,? fftj ?*?2 r DiClio, m has 

tour Georges, whereas the NCW SfidenSf^f ISSL to f wmn i n 8 the 
adds the poetic dimension applicable lcJencc of reluctant word-users, 
in the reign of George V. It would f >U i- li V l col ? 1 P” ni<1 i n i >° essential scho- 
bave been helpful if it had included » n , st .L cs,s 11 . sho ' lld P rove invaluable 
note of the area of specialization - t0 ,hL ’ comil?itted W studen ‘- 
oology, biology, an. religion - Anne Rickwood | 


The Anagram Dictionary. By Michael 

Robert Hale £7.95. 0 7091 9674 1. 
C HuE ° f AnH 8 rams< B y Samuel 

otuSKuI Kegan "I “■ 91 

-The A RS MAGNA of anagrams has 
teased, tned and tired its devotees 
through the ages. Employed to sati- 
Jize, disguise and flatter, anagrams 
had their heyday in the Victorian era 
in the form of cognate anagrams 
where transposed words in phrases 
or names retain a degree of original 
meaning or relevance. The 
GREATEST IDEALIST BORN was 
Dante Gabriel Rossetti; Lewis Car- 
roll invented I LEAD, SIR for Dis- 
raeli. and the message of Queen Vic- 
toria's Jubilee was I REQUIRE 


LOVE IN A SUBJECT. 

Today, anagrams live on in cross- 
words, and both the authors are ex- 

Mr min 


™ r. A , .Jj . “ u 1 KC w «m ms kacy 

MANY 4 S ^?VirJ N ®?°A CH IN° 

if' aTLA Hj ^ rd ,TEST (anagram 
tb c book and author), has sections 
of five to thirteen-letter words from 

fvTMsrn to y ersifi calion 
(VERIFICATIONS). While he alone 

notes the complexities of beinc 
simultaneously hoseless and slioelessf 
only Curl can illuminate the intrica- 
aes of oh (HO) and owl (LOW). 

thHt skilJ KILL! study 
is DUSTY and Elvis LIVES. Unfor- 
tunately they include the derogative 
terms Kafir and nigger and Curl in- 
sensitively allows the anagram of 


Cnut to slip in. Hunter has fewer 
place and personal names, so it is in 

! 0Sl AU , ST ' L6 ' find ZeUS 

m .* Stendhal and SHETLAND 
nnd Taoism in a MAOIST. When it 
comes to being precise Curl misses 
respice (Latin for look back) and has 
a momentary lapse - no entry for 
leaps. Hunter omits id est under 

Tess ' and l,as no largesse for gear- 

Consulted together these books 
will provide essential reading for the 
crossword enthusiast, but beware - 
the anagram of teach is CHEAT. Of 
the two Curl is more immediately 
accessible and, with his additional 
cognate anagrams, more entertain- 
J58.\ of suggestion (IT EGGS US 

SMILE?/ M ° na LiSB CAH ’ NOT A 

K a mini Kiiill 


V ' ■ i V 
1 ■■ 1 




r: r ■ , 


■*i :v-' ; 


.■J \.4 I 

;»• • -■ 
i, ; : « , # : i 




Top of their class 


^The Oxford 
Senior Dictionary 




I#" The Concise 
Oxford Dictionary 



This newest Oxford dictionary is 
ideal for secondary school or 
college students. It contains the 
specialist subject vocabulary they 
will need up to 0 level or CSE 
standard, including scientific and 
technical language. 

* Presented with Oxford’s inevit- 
able clarity and elegance' 

The Times 

Vocabulary: 45,000 words 

<H9 9^0221 X £2.50 

Jacketed edition: 

0 19 910222 B £3.75 net 
Published 


CONCISE 

OXFORD 

l>[( T IONARY 


fefyf c .°p** of The Oxford Senior Dictionary an available from; ' 

^ University Press, Fducathn Department (EBL 292f, Walton Stmt, Oxford OX2 6gR. 


The Good Book Guide in its 
dictionary survey had this to say 
about the previous edition: 

1 The classic single-volume 
dictionary, benefiting from over \ 

100 years of Oxford scholarship . 

. . . the most consistently 
accurate dictionary for general . 
use \ 

Vocabulary; 7 5 ,000 words 
1,312 pages 

0198611315 £7.75 net 

. Thumb indexed: 

019861132 3 £9. 50 net 

And in presentation editions . i 
Publication: July 

Available from good booksellers, including W. H. Smith,. John Mentos, and Bouts bank 


mi\ i oj i n >\ r»n2 



f 1 

n: 








J 1 

I I I 


i m 


Basic Dictionaries 
from Bell & Hyman_ 

A Basic Dictionary of . . . 

Geography Mathematics 

Home Economics Technical Terms 


extra 


1in ~ TIMhS k»^-ational supplement 


«« i 




’ * -A . » ’Vfti 




i t ... •. 

... ■ ,,l *■-»* 

, ' rS 


The first four titles in this exciting new series o! dictionaries have 
been designed for beginners in the subjects covered. Definitions of 
basic terms have been written in simple, non- specialist language 
and are supplemented by carefully chosen examples and 
particularly clear illustrations. 

Apart from the help they will give the beginner, the dictionaries 
will also be useful remedial aids for older students and those 
learning English as a second o; foreign language. 

Each dictionary either £ / , 75 (64pp) or £i .50 (48pp) 

All illustrated 


Inspection copies 

are available to teachers and lecturers In the UK 
by posting this coupon to Bell & Hyman Ltd, 

FREEPOST, LONDON SE1 QBR. 

Please send me inspection copies of the books I have ticked 

A Basic Dictionary of Geography 1248 8 

A Basic Dictionary of Home Economics 13 17 9 

A Basic Dictionary of Mathematics 1269 8 

A Basic Dictionary of Te chnlcal Terms 1270 9 

NAME (CAPITALS) 

SCHOOL/COLLEGE 

ADDRESS 


TES 6/82 



productions 

■ Teachers’ Visual Aids Ltd 

Ramsay House, 1 Ramsay Close, Broxbourne, Herts 

THEY LAST FOR EVER AND SAVE 
TEACHERS' AN IMMENSE AMOUNT OF TIME 

Double-side portable charts and outline maps for use with chalk, 
covering most subjeols. 


CUT HERB — — — — * 


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Nemo ' 

School Address. 


catalogue. 


The bear and the dragon 


The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Rus- 
sia and (he Soviet Union. Kditcd hy 
Archie Brown, John Fennell, Michael 
Knser, and T II Willetts 
Climb ridge University Press £18, 50. 
521 2 MM H. 

Fncylopcriln of Chinn Todny. Edited 
by Frederic M Knplnn mid Julian 
M. Sohln with an Introduction hy 
John S. Service (third edition) 
Macmillan £14.95, 333 32447 |. 

linclopedins urc written for two con- 
tradictory rensons. Firstly, because 
one work is never la roc enough to 
contain what wc would like to find in 
it. Secondly, because we, the gullible 

C ublic, arc suckers for the clnim that 
ere, at last, is the book to end all 
books! Pliny the Greek in his Natural 
History boldly asserted that his “en- 
cyclopaedia” by definition treated 
"all subjects”. Sir Thomas lilyot in 
1538, purported that his encyclopedia 
“comprehended! all lybcral science”. 
He presumed that it would find a 
ready market among “orators” who 
were required, he observed, “to be a 
heape of all manner of learning". 

An encyclopedia or “dictionary" in 
French appeared in 1674 from the 
sole pen of one Louis Moreri pur- 
porting to cover just about every- 
thing. However, no later than 1697 
an exiled French Huguenot, Pierre 
Bayle, persuaded a Dutch publisher 
to pay nim n full-time salary to pro- 
duce a rival work. Bayle held the 
view that knowledge without critic- 
ism is sterile. His Historical and Cri- 
tical Dictionary showed that an en- 
cyclopedia of equal volume lo 
Moreri’s could be aevoted merely to 
exposing the errors and heresies of 
the original. Boyle's dictionary not 
only made a fortune for his publisher 
but it enabled Bayle to give up his 
teaching and live entirely oy his pen. 

A newer but beguiling fullacy 
attractive to journalists and pub- 
lishers, is that an encyclopedia Is 
respectable if it is written by a team 
of experts rather than by a single 
mind. Tho great Encyclopedic of 
1751, directed by Diderot, novided 
the milch copied model, emulated by 
Chambers, Britnnnica, Pears and 
many others. Alas, we suckers for (he 
compendium - and I am one - rarely 
remember nt the point of purchase 


Ih.il the deserved reputation of the 
original lay in the subtle relationships 
of the editor and his brilliant eontri- 
butors. They included the finest phi- 
losophic minds of France in the mid- 
eighteenth century - Rousseau, Vol- 
taire, Montesquieu, C'oiuhllac and 
llelvetius were among them - and 
Diderot knew how to use to de east- 
ing effect their critical skills. 

In their contrasting whjs. these 
(wo encyclopedias, lire first on Rus- 
sia and the Soviet Union, the second 
on China today illustrate the proposi- 
tion that the* secret of tcam-ivork 
encyclopedias is both the calibre of 
the team and the balance of fact am) 
analysis. 

The Cambridge Eiuvclopedlii of 
Russia and the Soviet Union uses 
more than one hundred contributors 
drawn from mainly British universi- 
ties and other scholarly institutions. 
Three of its four editors come from 
St Antony’s College Oxford, ami one 
would expect tuiin the content and 
its coordination lo he of high quality. 
It is divided into 12 main sections 
covering the fields of history, reli- 
gion, art and architecture, languugc 
and literature, the performing arts, 
the sciences, politics, economics, so- 
cial affairs, eduction, militury affairs 
and international relations. It is 
lavishly illustrated with pictures, 
charts, diagrams nnd colour photo- 
graphs on sniny pages. It hns a select 
Bibliography relating to cuch section 
of accessible works in English thus 
providing a major work of reference 
tor both the private und the institu- 
tional buyer. 

Yet there is about this compen- 
dium a clinical coldness. Nor is this 
alleviated by uny overall editorial 
article that might have justified this 
approach or provided a unifying 
overview. 

The Encyclopedia of China Todny 
was first published in 1979 and this is 
the third revised edition. Frederick 
M Kaplan and Julian M Sobin. 
the editors, arc more outside Ilian 
within the formal ucndcmic world. 
Among other things, Mr Kaplun is 
editor nnd publisher of the Li liras in 
Press. Mr Sobin is mninly u business- 
man in the field of chemicals in- 
volved in East-West trade. They have 
however brought together a team of 
scholars and journalists and, like 


to the business community - S? 
ample n contains articles and 

dices, ou '-Ooing Bunnea 

. i ( Republic of cC 

llie Jmm Venture Law of 3 
and ‘ Facsimiles or Visa and (W 
Forms - it offers scholarly, evS 
mcces nu lull nspcctsof Modem Cha 
tlT equally high quality throughout 
he sections on land and popE 
luw, politics und government, S 
nomic system, and an and obi t. 

An absorbing chapter coven 
fine arts, crufts and arched 


The Packet Oxford Dictionary. 
Rtisslan-Enatlsh. Compiled by Jessie 
Coulson. hngilsh-Kusslan. Compiled 
by Nigel Rankin nnd Della 
Thompson. 

Clarendon Press: Oxford University 
Press £5.95, 0 19 864122 2. 

Let It be said from the outset: this 
revised and expanded edition of the 
1975 Pocket Oxford is without doubt 
the most complete and succinct pock- 
et Russian-English nnd English- Rus- 
sian dictionary in oxistonce, whether 
it be British, American or Soviet. 
The format Is convenient, the type 
clear, there are few misprints, words 
are property stressed, alternatives 
and alternative Inflected forms are 
listed (thus separate entries, for ex- 
ample, for both zhevat’ and zhuyu, 
“to chew" and “I chew"), and* defini- 


tions arc both adequate und various. 

It is the expansion and moderni/a- 
tlon of the lexis that is the most 
obvious und welcome feature of the 
new edition. T here hns been n large 
influx especially in the scientific nnd 
technological fields (“analogue com- 
puter", r ‘u(| untune”), in new snctul 
and technical concepts (iwifm/moniy 
boTnoy, “out-patient"), in Russian 
slang (amfail, ekspo, chernaya vow 
na , fchabar) nnd some account hns 
been taken of the alarming invasion 
of English-based neologisms and 
“pair-words” in technical und not-so- 
technical Russian. 

A spot-check none the less reveals 
even here some Irksome inconsisten- 
cies and discrepancies; wc have 
“electronic digital computer" and 
“software", but no '’heart- trans- 
plant"; “video", adj. and “vidco- 


which like so many other 
is lovingly and fluently wittu 
Wc arc told, for example, flit 
in the 30 years since 1949 BrcfeolM. 
ists have uncovered sites and aitifeS 
which demand n redefinition of on 
whole picture of ancient Chinese am 
and society; and that there a n I* 
numerable sites yet to be excavated. 

Comparing these two works lexis 
necessarily to conclusions about (be 
proper (asks of the director of ibe 
team of contributors, First, the ba- 
ler he or she knows the subject the 
more important it is to offer scope 
for an article that is evaluative a 
well ns fnclual. In this respect the 
Encyclopedia of China Tody ha 
succeeded in getting better vahie 
front its authors. For example it is 
important us well as fascinating to 
learn that the Chinese tradition of 
the poo (/politician is as old u 
Chinese history itself. Thus 

“It was no accident of fate bet a 
very ancient tradition that made 
Mao Zedong a poet as well as i 
national leader.’ 

Nor is there in the Russian enqt- 
lopcdiii unv overview at all to discus 
the country's changing image in ibe 
West, let alone one which matches ia 
its perceptive ness the Introductory 
account of Chinn by John S Service. 
By contrast the hundred or sa coitin- 
billon to lire Encyclopedia of Mm 
and the Soviet Union hive been 
ill-used by being turned into irj- 
vcyors of dry fact unnouilshed oj 
critical comment. 

Sally Jenkinsop 


No hamburger, no chip 


tape'', but no noun „ fo £ Jjft 
“microwave” . but no 
“nuclear", but no ' 
d cheat per (pullover), NJ 0 . J 
(jeans); no “hamburger 
no equivalent for ih* '“HSS 
shirks (not "steak’ ); wjf’j.TS, 
bnrakhh uvjkldm, but no > 

- too rude for OUP? - ^ ** 

There is also some rl “Kf ar |W 
mkl-sounding periphrasis i. 

neuklyuzhy, 

suss lor 

shut##®*. 

D. E. Butfgffl 


Words along the way 


A TUatrory of Fore^n-Language DUs 
tfwwrta. py. Rf L. Cofllson. 

Andre Deutsch £12,95. 0 233 97310 

9.]y[y ■».- '■ , 

"To make - a .dictionary Is dull work ," 
sold Dr. Johnson. And lie ought to 
know. By extension,' the making of a 
history of dictionaries. la likely to be 
a pretty deadly Undertaking. Robert 
Colllson, however; In his History of 
Foreign-Language Dictionaries , gives 
the impression that though his fac- 
tual material requires only dedicated 
scholarship ' and careful exposition, 
he; retains for It a real interest ana 
enthusiasm. . 


After aa Introduction iii which he 
advances a few ideas about the his* 
torical significance of dictionaries 
(their place In the growth of 
nationalism, for example.) Collisqn 
gets down tQ : his main task of 
discussing in strict chronology the 
notable . non-English dictionaries 
frop jhd earliest times to The pre- 
serit. This takes him from the early 
Greek glossaries on Homer, through 
the explosions of the rise of printing 
and the enlightened eighteenth cen- 
tury, to the proliferation in this cen- 
tury (he , points out that there hnve 
been more dictionaries published in 
thoi twentieth century than appeared 
in th& previous: two thousand years). 


He traces the 
cept of the 

(from. W-OWffi'SiS* 


difficult or exnnct i.. n UB w . 

of a language i n u ^?d°useha ^ 
This is a readable and .,g_ 

of reference, fnform#. 

nmounl of TV* 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


Keep the faith 


The World's Religions 

Lion Publishing £9.95. 85648 187 4. 

Qj titrated Dictionary of World Rdl- 

S By Arthur A. Jones. 

ous Education Press £6.50. 08 
1 7; £10.00 08 024176 X 


Korea io^he A5d« ; d an1 iffipISra 111611 

,uda - . uca 

deviate SrWKL - . 


extra 

Hardware I 


Atlas of Bible Times. 

Lion Publishing £2.95 . 85648 436 9. 
Oxford Bible Atlas. Edited by Her- 
bert G. May. 

Oxford £2.95. 019 211557 X. 


pran time to time I have had the 
experience of interviewing a theolo- 
fflin for radio or television. I have 
developed one possibly unfair gener- 
alization about them. Asked to sum 

lit— — .a •>■>... 


fitment «p n i J , ur rae t*ul- A « uaw rrocessiDc and 

J=°rE r ^ “-ft. n 

k Moslem to whom I have = - 

onThdr faitS k JW the secHons i con *P«ti the citations and defini- 
patrontons or , ?i. any - way f 0 ," 8 " otn lhe lettor D until a family 

artirW k! ?L onei ®‘ ve - The vanous interrupt occurred. I give the statistic 

SWoSftS S? mributors ’ d0 8athcred » this ^dy® There well S 

une page there mav hp a citaiinnc mmmnn L..L J' 


vary rin nn. Z ^-huhiuiwh, qo sttinerea ia uus study. There were 23 
sirrrale hcre W be 8 ? taUons common to y both dictionar- 

vT“M lln « °a e W'n’s f«- p. M in lhe Penguin Vnd “™ihe 


bimimi w r u«c launs res- ics, to in he Ponau n and not In th* 

up, “In a word, briefly”, their view the next may be a demand- Macdonald andlvSns24in tht 

of « proposition, they will usually V]8 article on Syncretism or the Macdonald and Evans end not in ihn 
answer, flit’s not as easy as that. I R does deserve a place Penguin. Of thV^ wmmon de- 

think there are number of points we In . the library however, oarttalliiriv iinlenda a ^ ^ 

must make here ...” 


Religious concepts do not lend 
themselves to over-simplification 
however and any reference book in 
Ibe field of religion is bound to be at 


in the 
where 
taught 



“T w ,cvei above * definitions in each dictionary 

It is a much more attractive book ? e 155 d . efiniens scanned, 18 
ft rather dour-looking Ulus- SSSj 1 ® H m enor or seriously 
trated Dictionary of World Religions ™ rfead ? gl . T ., en «>unlered several 
whose illustrations are either snSi deDniens for two 

black-and-white photographs orTn- ?,S, nct defil ?j« nda . but my data-cap- 
different line drawings. It has been Sk n P. a ROt l? im was n01 sel up to 
^loped from a glossary designed. SZlnn ,h “ unsur Prising phe- 
to help Open University swdents^and nt S e 
it covers everything from Galilee and to ?, CSC re5 V lts ? ake 11 less im P° r - 
Gargoyles to Paracletes and Pashu- gamine the ments of the two 

patas (they are followers ofthe . than t0 “i 1 " 110 qu«- 


r — uwi wiKvuuruues 

browsine. ° . — r - t-.-t — ■•«* P ui«r 

r»*.k . r.-- . a . rc - 1 think, responding to a felt 

Of the two Bible atlases, the Lion desire of the lay public to have a way 

n m b e (“) Vith A “ Z of Jmowing what it is that those 
Guide to Places ) is for the vounger boffins are talking about, and no- 
aae group. With colourful maps, quire, through mastery of the voca- 

nnofoornnhc nnH phorto no Itmll ^nlum aL.C.IJ .1 


and they 
to a felt 
Bve a way 


John the Baptist baptising Jesus (18th 
colury Ethiopian manuscript), From 
Amur A. Jones "Illustrated Diction- 


*7 of World Religions". 


age group. With colourful maps, quire, through mastery of the voca- 
photographs and charts, as well the bulary, mastery of the field. But the 
clear and easy-to-use “A-Z Guide", evidence from these, and other com- 
it will nurture much project work in puling dictionaries I have looked at, 
middle and secondary schools and is that this demand is not being satis- 
nlso prove a very acceptable refer- fred. 

cncc book for CSE and O level It is not, because, in the current 
groups. What is particularly pleasing state of development of the field, it 
is the absence of "jargon" from the cannot. Things are moving too fast 
tori. and the field is too broad. Since 


leul momentarily abstruse or alter- 
nmvely banal. Full marks therefore 


a“« 

U B, is A nVl l ^ edi bSor^th^mT hardware « to devising tiseffi new 
it'-*, buf an Atlas ot maSTwiS 

lCXt ‘ .^i 115 somewhat and even among groups rendered 
fS u dls nc ion . P?J nls ft} mutually inrommunicado by com- 

that there are only 26 maps in its 144 merdal secrecy or academic rivalry 
pages and the interwoven text oro- in tfiA mrp fnr nnhima^nn ■ <o 


S to all (he editors nnd authors of 
sse four volumes: it is easy to sec 
just how useful tacit will be to a 
particular audience. 


m iw uiuuu, OUILC 

parallel developments in recognizing 
y x f ora , useful explanatory concepts, in find- 
A A .I- f n 8 useful new ways of organizing 


9 Religions is n sump- 
handbook. Profusely illustrated 
JJ™. colour ' il » whut its title 
■SSaT," BJjldo to the past and 
PiNh of the world. It covers 
SS5 ftclopment of religion, 
Ud bol l cfs ,«f Rgym. Greece 
S... ? c i n, ) d of lh0 Azlees ami 

■Eg** m J ,r,ninl reHglon 
SP } scrios of “cnsc-stutlies" 


j .r . v »* , **k° ■■■ merciat secrecy or acaaemic rivalry 

pages und the intenvoven text pro- j n the race for publication, it is no 
vidos u fnirly detailed commentary wonder that the same notion has 
on those maps. Not a book to pro- diffarAni in n i. Me 


..wwa u %**wum**wj wonder mat the same notton has 

on those mow. Not a book to pro- different names In different places, 
vide you Wtlh information in a Worse, one group may name and 

word hrlpflu" II k nnvf- rthplfta a -I 4- ^ 


b-jt. . — : — — * MM-mwNv 

from the Aborigines to (he 


archaeological evldc 
the Bible narrative. 



as derived and implicit. I well remem- 
nnvlrl Coif ber, when Manchester invented 
wavia sen PaRes and mxt Segments, it took 

three or four years before either real- 
ly understood what the other was 
talking about and ; several more be- 
fore an agreed common terminology 


evolved. 

There is another factor involved 
too. There are hardware engineers, 


iTTNiilil-B :UwilUvi»' 'M-Vf ■U-fHBL.LiJ tJI'Hl 


mere, language designers, language 




specified, applicaffon programmers, 
applicaUoa ujejs, instailauon niana- 
gers and many more. Each will be a 

E arrial master of his own field and 
ave a nodding acquaintance with the 
two or three adjacent fields but will 


IWU Ul luivv — 7 

be almost totally IgnoranC beyond. 
There can be no Dr Johnson to 


There can be -no Dr Johnson to 
encase the whole span of knowledge. 

Mr Chandor Is clearly a hardware 
man with an acquaintance with sys- 
tem programming in a rUtawjW* 
fesbioned stole. Mr Anderson is a 
business-applications ! man -.who has 
gone into hardware. Neither show 
any unttorataodlng of modem high- 
level programming languages or prog- 
ramming concepts. /■ ••••• ■ 

Finally, Penguin, makes much of 

*■ « f -j H-«frwAiirriA0Ccnr n in 


rui ouji — : r- 

the buzz-word "microprocessor” in 
their title and blurb. There WTO two 1 
citations with microprocessor rele- 
vance among 118 citations whose 
firtt letter was F. Maybe au 

unrepresentative sample, but I do not. 
think so. Microprocessors are amira- 
cle of price-performance prorision, 

but they have very few popcepb par-i 
tjcqlar to them. 


_rfugh the nu- 
. -taws no claim to 


U , M l " V —•■III* iu 

7 toere is simply not 
...Vui?™ 18 depth or 


il m «ny entries arc 
vague and uninfor- 
ft shorter ones 
^quld be considered 


mobile see transport" and with posi- 
tively useless explanations at 
“little known and less appreciated 
theorems" (Noether's), the a i he 
might have used the already limited 
apace at his disposal to better peda- 
gogical effect. 


First Atlas 80 


Compiled by M Renwick and W Pick 
Sf maps P d dra '^ n 8 s w ™ tori the basic interpretation 


/'lias 0-17-425417-2 

Wbrkbook (In preparation) 0-17-425418-0 aW* 


£1.15 
about 35p 





** i i/ip iti’ '. i ;;.-B 


■ 1 »• y v 
M 


m0 


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...f- ‘.-r— 

. 1 r “v. : • ■. ; 

^™™r 0 lft ple ' 1so ..y? re l0: Th* PKmolions 

Thomas Nelson and Sons Ltd., 
Nelson House, HkUon-on-Thames, Surrey KT12 4BR 

Nelson 


Why do so many schools choose 
Collins-Longman Atlases? 




t"’: 


Comprehensive Content 
Clarity of Design * 
Competitive Price 
Durability 


" - ■ • fln excellent series of atlases . . ..at prices, which 
represent good value for money." T.E.S. 


You'll need inspection copies to see for yourself/ 


Return the slip below tot Cofllns-Lohgman Atlases, Longman House, 
Burnt Mill, Harlow, Essex CM20 2JE 


Please send me ap Inspection copy of the following Htle{a): 


□ Let's Make Maps 50p 

(A preHitlas workbook • 

Q Atlas One ■ 9Sp 

. (For 7-9 year olds) 1 

0^ Atias One Workbook ,5Sp; 
0 Atlas Tyo 

(For 9-13 yepr olds) . 


□ Atlas Two Workbook E{ 

□ Atlas Three. £2.; 

( Middle/Secondary School . . 
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,Q Atlas Four ■ . £2,i 

(Secondary Certificate levels) 
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• v ■ 







extra — 

Come back, Sri Aurobindo 


Peter Vansittart on two new dictionaries of biography 


The Concise Dictionary of National 
Biography i 1901-1970. 

Oxford £17.50. 0 19 865303 4. 

The Macmillan Dictionary Biography. 
Macmillan £14.95. 0 333 27274 9. 

The Macmillan volume reaches from 


Hnmmurabi. of t|ic eighteenth cen- 
tury BC t to Astaire, Woody Allen, 
Doris Lessing. Turning up Toynbee, 
you may be halted by Traherne, Ben 
Travers, von Treitsnkc. Trenchurd, 
the Trevelyans. The Sitwells, with the 
flavour of Edith's early verse, nestle 
between Sitting Bull and Sixtus IV. 
There is room Tor Hulagu Khan, and 
Arius, of the notorious thcologicnl 
dispute. The range, indeed, is im- 
pressive enough to make one want to 
play the game of catching the editors 
out. 

Missing nre Aethclwold of Win- 
chester, prodigious art patron, nnd 
Hroswitha of Gandersneim, first 
woman playwright. If Rafael Sahati- 
ni, Claude Duval, Paul Whiteman, 
Ben Bella, axe in, why not Emil 
Ollivier, Henri Rochefort, the 
murderous General von Trotha, and 
the dreadful Felix Dzerzhinsky, the 
Cheka Voss, whose portait was 
cherished by Bernard Shnw? Also 
Alexandra Kollentai, George Arliss, 
Charles Packe exploring mountains 
with Horace in his pocket, the ruf- 
fianly St Vlndimir of Kiev, Sir 
George Try on, whose ghost 
appeared at a London party while he 
himself was sinking his own flagship, 
and the Rev Elisha Fawcett, whose 
wooden leg, planted in the Admiral- 
ty Islands, apparently took root and 

g royided cricket bats. Near Bowen, 
lizabeth Dorothea Cote, one does 
not find Bowdler, Rev Thomas 
who, editing Othello, piously altered 
to trumpet, Y 'your wife lias played the 
strumpet in your bed". 

Nevertheless, Alexander Herzen 
and Heinrich Mann seem the only 
serious omissions, and the range of 
incidental information is massive. 
Not everyone will have much fore- 
knowledge of AleS Hrdliska, or 
Evariste Regis Hue, or know the 
authors of Anthony Adverse, and 
The Songs of n Sentimental Bioko, or 
what the B expresses in ‘Cecil B c|e 
MHIc. Biographical facts mny lie sup- 
plemented by judicial assessments, 
Boethius, for example, being cre- 
dited, with trying to reconcile human 
free will with divine foresight*. 
Macaulay with "lack of imagination". 

. and, for Belloc, "In the First World 


War, he gained n short-lived reputa- 
tion as a military critic". Ramsay 
Macdonald would perhaps have been 
gratified by his designation as “a 
man of wide culture", n belief 
ignored, perhaps wisely, hy the Ox- 
ford volume. 

The entry for Voroshilov is surely 
too bland, ns is certainly that of John 
of Leyden who indeed "instituted 
IHilygnmy and community of goods” 
but with extravagnnt operatic 
bloodshed overlooked here. Fid- 
kenhayn's "failure at Verdun” glos- 
ses over one of Cite futile carnages of 
the century. 1 enjoyed the demure 
verdict on Leopold IT: "his private 
conduct was also not conducive to 
popularity". Inevitably, there nre 
oversimplifications. Napoleon Ill's 
Mexican adventure was designed ns 
rather more than “a dc bl-collccting 
mission". The treatment of Mussoli- 
ni, Robespierre, Emperor Frederick 
II is excellent. 

Space mnkes its own criticism. 
Mohammed rates \Vz columns, 
together with Plato, de Gaulle, 
Jesus, Mozart, Dr Johnson, 
Washington, Lenin, Hitler: less than 
Goethe and FDR, more than Bud- 
dha, Nat King Cole, Henry Pu Yi, 
Richard Burton and Helen Wills 
Moody. 

The Oxford is more severely fac- 
tual, useful for academics and journal- 
ists in n hurry, listing dates and acti- 
vities, often without comment, 
though sometimes breaking from the 
impersonal, with Arthur Cook 
judged os "an agitator rather than a 
negotiator". Earlier editors might 
have discountenanced “had passion- 
ate love-affair with Violet Trefusls, 
1918-21" for Vita Sackville-West. 
But blandncss intrudes here too. “In- 
terested in folk-lore and witchcraft" 
scarcely does justice to Mnrpnret 
Murray's unflagging zeal for a Euro- 
pean pagan cult probably imaginary, 
and 1 E Lawrence’s entry gives no 
hint of controversies he still pro- 
vokes. Wc can learn that Sir Archi- 
bald Armar Montoomery-Massing- 
berd was CIOS* 1933-6, but nothing 
of what he actually did. Such, names 
ns Sir Muliaihmed Iqbal nnd Sir Glr- 
jn Shankn, recall cultural debts to 
the sub-continent « and fading names 
attract n certain wistful poetry. Sir 


Guildhnumc Myrddln-Evans, Lyns- 
key with his Tribunal, Sliopurii 5a k- 
lnlvflln, once communist MP for 


North Unttcrsoa. 

It is interesting to compare those 
books when thoy overlap. Both 


Among contributors to the Extra: 

DqvM Builgcn Is n lecturer In tho Sully Jcnklnson la senior lecturer In 
Department of Rwsinn Language . politics and government m the 
nnd Literature at the School of Shi- Polytechnic of North London 
vonlc nnd Ensl European Studies) 

IMMMIe Is senior lecturer hi land Nuws Ed,tor of General 

surveying at NottU Easl London 1 rac{ * flon * r ■ ' 


Philip Howard is Literary .Editor of Lawrence j Knott is a general practi- 
The-'Ttnies': (loner 



V- 







The Environmental 


. 1 st Atlas of 
the environment 
.•* 2nd, Atlas of 
thel Environment 
T$m&t(asof 
Environment 


wan Mens 





ignore the splendid Sri Aurobimlo. 
perhaps for his conviction that the 
first principle of education is that 
nothing cun be taught. Oxford’s slur 
is Oucen Victoria, with 9 columns, 
to Churchills 2: Macmillan gives 
her l Vi, Churchill 2. Macmillan men- 
tions Kichmul Crumpton wits a 
teacher, but Oxford adds (hut she 
was a classics mistress ut Bromley 
High School for Girls: also (hut the 
"William" hooks amounted to 38, 
but that 39 other novels were less 
successful. Oxford ulso makes it 
easier to understand why Lord Salis- 
bury is colled “(he grout", and com- 
ments, "Condemning the impractical 
and scorning sentiment and cant, he 
was a master of satire”. 

Though Macmillan includes 
Mother Shipton, Nahum Tate, Robin 
Hood and Lizzie Borden, modem 
historians fare badly. No Row.sc. 
Butterfield, Collingwood, Trevor- 
Roper, A J P Taylor. While Oxford 
overlooks famous murderers, Mac- 
millan records Crippen, Christie, 
By waters, and Briaes-in-the-Balh 
Smith. Oxford admits that Horatio 
Bottomley "squandered enormous 
sums", Macmillan is more expansive. 
"He conducted his cases so success- 
fully that he began to think of him- 
self as being above the law. Despite 
bankruptcies he contrived to live like 
a prince." 

Yet, unlike Macmillun, Oxford 
does refer, though mildly, to the 
enigmatic Arthur Keith being "in- 
volved" with the Piltdown fraud. Both 
are inadequate on Conan Doyle, 
ignoring almost all his manifold 
extra-Uterary activities, notably his 
selfless intervention in the Oscar 
Slater (q.v. Macmillan) case, which 
helped establish the Court of Criminal 
Appeal. Mncmillmi is superior on 
Casement and Plum Warner, fur 
more discursive on D H Lawrence, 
less revealing on Ransitsinhji: Ox- 
ford is fuller on L B Namier, though 
less interesting. Unlike Macmillan. 


- '-'TV 

' I -Vr * 

. v' 


ft . 

tsm?# 





Iiitvivaiuigi wiiimv I*IUV iiiiihih. 

Oxford rejects William Joyce and 
includes Arthur Waley. Macmillan 
mentions "the darker side of Hugh 
Wfllpolc’s strangely divided charac- 
ter", but, discreet about this, Oxford 
notes Ids generosity to other writers. 

Both books will be needed for the 
library, Macmillan perhaps for the 
bedside also, with Us all-thnc, world- 
wide references. Exploring the career 
of Helen Keller, one at once gels 
Ned Kelly and Fred rich August 
Kekulc von Strndonitz os well. 


Peter Vansltlnrl’s Intent book Is 
Voices From the CJreat War (Cupe) 

John Wetghfman is Professor Emer- 
itus of French, University of London 


More reference book re- 
views on pages 29 and 30 


From “Butterflies", by Alan Watson 

Papillons 

The Illustrated Encyclopedia of the 
Butterfly World In Colour. By Paul 
Smart. 

Corgi Transworlil £5.95. 
(J 552 98206 7. 

Collins llandguidc to the Butterflies 
of Africa. Written and lllustruted by 
R II Carcasson. 

Collins £7.95. 0 <K) 219783 9. £4.95. 
0 00 219784 7. 

A Complete Guide to British Butterf- 
lies. By Margaret Brooks and Charles 
Knight. 

Cape £10.95 . 0 224 0I95H 9. 
Butterflies. By Allan Watson. 
Kingfisher Books/Ward Lock £2.50. 
0 7063 6100 8. 

Butterflies and Moths In Britain nnd 
Kurune. By David Carter. 

Pan Books/Hclnamnnn in iisiociiitiun 
with the British Museum (Natural 
History) £6.50. 0 330 26642 X. 
£12.50. 0 434 10965 7. 

Butterflies and Moths. By Brian liar- 

? reaves nnd Michael Chlncry. 

.'ollins Ocm Guides £1.75. 
0 00 458808 8. 

Butterflies. Illustrations by Jail Kckjan, 
Bland ford Miniguidc 95p. 
0 7137 1210 4. 

Tho Oxford Book of Insects. By John 
Burton el al 

Oxford * University Press £2.50. 
0 19 217725 7. 

It would be rcmarknble Indeed if the 
Year of the Butterfly wont hy with- 
out n smile or books on thin most 
colourful of the insect orders. Nor 
have we been disappointed. Most of 
them tiro worthy iitlditiunH to (he 
lepidflptcriHt’s shelves, although 
some stand out partly because of 
(heir forge formut widen is so neces- 
sary to do the Insects full justice. The 
‘Illustrated Encyclopedia of the But- 
terfly World In Colour ix very much h 
case In point. With over 2.IXX) spe- 
cies phologrnphlcnliy illustrated in 
full colour nnd nctual size - both 
plates of set specimens and shots of 
the living butterflies - it is ns much 
an aesthetic experience as n refer- 
ence book. But reference book It 
surely is since eight of the world's 
butterfly families are fairly oxhaus- 


^ n ' iT ' 

of Madagascar (Mala^&S 
fe < offer u tlandatlde loth nH#- 

. possible, M-iiii q Ul j e SUDe .v 

and lext by RH cJKSfe 

ftewaaiS 
sw -Ja&ssss 

Untiim, by contrast, now hu oik 
' s . ; Species of butterfly and mwS. 

' Judy guide books about XX 

fairly plentiful. What has beX. 
ing until now is help lowaidj £ 
lifying the insects' early states k a 

form jbm wilUn^le the ob&rto 

say " null's it!”. That U now cbj 
with A Complete Guide toBM 
Butterflies for here, at last, in q. 
depth photographic coverage of a 
species' eggs, larvae and pupae, ■ I 
addition to the adults. Mam^ 
Brooks spent 16 years gelling fat 
photos together and the result an 
admirably useful comptefa, 
although it must be said that a ptop- 1 
ortion of the photos are too .ad, 
muzzy or under-exposed for certaa 
similar species to be separated with 
n Watson certainty. 

Allan Watson’s Butterflies li dffc 
i rent again. Field guide in form, its 

5 coverage extends beyond Britaia to 

illustrate and describe all 255 spedttk 

— = western Europe north of (lie Alps, 

la of the which is fine so long as one’s lepUop- 
By Paul (urological investigations do not n- 
tend to Italy and Greece! The paintings 
£5.95. . of ndults only - are good and dear 

and the text concise and to the note 
lultcrflles moreover the book is sturdily wind 
Iruted by and pleasing to handle. 

Dr David Carter, a lepidoptemtu 
9. £4.95. the British Museum (Natural His- 
tory). was consultant for Watson's 
i Buttcrf- book. He is also the author of (be 
d Charles mU re ambitious Butterflies wi 
Moths in Britain and Em p*. 

9. wherein problems of selection tit 

n. exacerbated by extension of coverage 

ck £2.50. to include the fletcrocera (moths). 

Over 300 species are described «1 
llaln nnd illustrated, mostly adults but includ- 
ing music early stages, and the coJoci 
Mociutioii photos arc really quite superb, tm- 
(Natural ciully those of species in. situ, lit 
166*12 X. only niggling doubt I hHve about iw 
book is tluit, since it is inewubty 
rliui liar- selective, might it not haw b m 
ry ‘ ... «,c belter to concentrate on ewer w 
£1.75. specimens or living ones? Thepcwi 
, , seems especially valid when spwa 
iiibekjan. ure generally illustrated in bW 

'file literally hand-sized Cotfes 
, Hy John limn Guide to Butterflies and Mm 
(of Europe) covers wwet more 
• £2.50. species: ulmut 125 butterflies 

moths. Most of them, forwwtfly, 
-- -'“ " 1 nre distinctively marked sp&nes jw. 
cctl if the identifiable in the held town 
by with- IlnrgTenvcss pninjliigs. ““J g*. 
thin most wimTtl not |ml tho latter Inqiw 

lors. Nor top drawer. uiunUy mJjHJJJJ* “f 
, Most of BhiiKlford Mlnl-guido AM WJJ 1 
b to the Imiikly. of very ^ 
although Adapted from ‘be NoW^ 

icmise of stdeetion of 64 speejes Is so 1 

so neces- and llhiulcal that it ^ 

mice. The species like wall. Include* ^ ^ 

the But- per in favour of the far more 
■y much a spread (nnd confiisoble) F 

,tX)0 spe- per ant! describes the reap J J. 

I rated in large blue as stMl to be J 
s - both in colonics in southern pan* 

I shots of Hrituin ,, .-litw one J ^ 
ns much Tim 

e world's rouson slncu this is mercly ^ 

! oxhaus- version of the larger wnm ^ 


suiciy sinus vigni oi me worm a iwwii ffirtiiat 

butterfly families are fairly oxhaus- version of the larger . , n ^ 
lively covered (the mGanificcnt pa pi- which first appeared »• j. ^ ^ 
llonlds and morphos, Tor example), original form it did a 
the others more • selectively. Each Introducing budding entom yg f j, 


tho others more selectively. Each 
family Is described and there nre 
Introductory ' chapters on biology, 
.structure, life history, coloration, 
ecology., and so forth, which are just 
about the most detailed I have over 
seen. . 

The butterfly faunas of some coun- 
tries ere naturally more diverse than 
others. Africa (south of the Sahara), 
for example, has over 3,100 species - 

For. anyone who cannot resist collect- 
ing shells for their aesthetic value, 
(here is . a compact guide which en- 
courages a more scientific approach. 
The Macdonald Encyclopaedia of 


The Macdonald Encyclopaedia of 
Shells (Macdonald > £4.95. 

0 '356 08575 9) catalogues no enor- 
mous variety of molluscs ;(the phylum 
niollusca contains more than 100,000 
species). The hmries are assembled 


which first appeared 
original form It did ® » 

Introducing budding cntom°lg ^ 
all the insect orders to w w ^ 
Britain (800 

20,000) - lemdoptera, ot co. 

well os tiny things like 
aphids. Unlortunaicly, i ^ 
duction in size of Kpractlc- 
sion’s illustrations reduces P, . . 
a! value considerably-- 

AnthooT ^ 

according to habitat. 

Illustrated w,tl i^ p t 

serve the shells. 


Carolina 


i 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


i ‘ • 

f ' : , i 


gEC COMMUNITY 

Subjects 

eootlnuad 

Scale 2 Posts and above 


|te? , ^ , oSL THE 

|sDdm«»ter: It.o. Ramon, 

fessw-ssss 

figffirtU or» luvltoil ii-uin 
MfflSSS ror Uiu p.Mi 

2V*H«ad or Dunlnnns Studlnn 

Ihln tho FociJl tv n r i lu nun, I - 
yj!, mi ,hia iihuul. frurn Mm 
Annina* ° r «'»" Autum,, 
Ta cIndldBti« m»*» I»p oUlo tu 

n,rar EconomlcH. AnounM 
and CommerCB to PKtariin o«- 

■alnstlon I o v o l ami will bo 
rtVoonalbla for ovnrxnnlnH 
Ul'fto praetlcp/nborthnml uiul 

t, 5f V Sca| , «*4 or 3 l* uvnl table 
ucordlna to thn omicrlenen 
nuallflcntlona at the ruitdlUutn 
■aDOliUed to IdiiiI thin bin-, 
ctiiful woll -raaou r«-a d depart- 

^Lottara of iipplltatlmi 
lagither with rurrli-iilum 
vita* and tho nuiiien ami 
■ ddraKBB or »wu refereeb IP 
Tha Hnndmaainr. The Hhenn- 

School, Minntnr Hoad, 
tir.inp. shoppey, Kent. 


1 3t sao 


SECONDARY 

SCHOOLS 


HEADSHIP 


ttUOTTfSMj SCHOOL 
hUmmOirden, 

STO3DQ 

Af^cailooi ut Invited lor Ihc 
kaJjhp of thh ichool which become 
vicul ob I January 1983 fallowinj Lhe 



naaidon lo tike up ■ Mnlor pouwiih 
mcfflar Authority of tha preient head- 
iwn, Mr O. Rotplglicl. Roll 1361. 
Bwnkio poop 12 ptui Inner London 
deem. 

fVite tend rooheap uu ror appllca- 
d* tone and fonher detail, m tha 
ttniian Officer, E<VTSHVBA. Coiui- 
p HiU. London. SEI 7PB. CliHint data 
j»*e letum of completed ipplicaih.n 
hum II June. 


DEPUTY HEADSHIPS 


EAfnJURELDKM) 

U#J. SCI 8 
T* 01 -454 71 56 
54 1 M 0 

garter: Dr W. Chapmen 

L Deputy 

™»yUJ to Join the loam comwldug 
Rite, uthei Deputy 

die lenfor edmJnliuatlon nf 


""W ”* 1 » ronirlbun t.» M nhv 
coaciined u>uh ni-ademk- 
w wdcHwi metitn. 

gpyvqmBN (sd) 

Bl<SD W ° Ro,d 

gafrist h 




. Ml8TflE8S 


C'toff 

-^wry 1W3. a loamd 
{deputy head Scale- 
tld' 'JW 1 tppoliuerf sfioufd he 
* ilh *1* «• 
toft*, u^g^jwiuioatiaiiu,, auuur 

^*ftTAND DE8IQN 

SrvSTRAn ...» 


AfrfflSlra. i ^ w ,M P 
j !? 9 , tot, wry •oil- 


W ih£n_7r_7" . '° ly won- 

‘•qtartmenl 

end 


BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 

Siv.s°o N ^ P,eld ^mm.tern 

Enrtl BB “ c On»nold 

gsf,1; 7 % Ki,5SW ba 

iisig 

NORTH YORKSHIRE 

KFawssptHrwk 

f..nC r K' ot form« «„d 
nbtoliiod fr^ 0 , t hS n M m V bB 

tor. to whom Hoadmoo- 

i-otiirmid wltMn be 

131820 


Scale 1 Post 

MOf-LAND PARK (SM) 

W8 7AF ,,den, ‘ C ""P den Hl11 Road, 
Tel: 01-727 5631 
Roll: 140Q 

Headmaster; Dr F. D. Ruih*orth 

. Jtom September 1982. 

(w A Level) 
u! II m ? e Art. jStem other ildlli). 
Well-ojulpped studio, and darktown*. 
long-es, abjlahed course. Owlnaw 
nmalgamatinn this It lechnlcally a*tem- 
porary post far one year only. 

CAHEERS 

Head* of Department 


CARDINAL MANNINO RClSB) 

Si Charles' Square. WIU 6 6EL 
lel: 01 -9W 2198 
Roll; 624 

1 leadmastei Mr T. (r. Oroaan 
acquired from 1.9.02. Careen Teacher 
Scale 3. lit maintain and develop ill 
ou*«a of careers education, to Balsa 
wfih the H.ltA careen sorvice, and to 
nrianlse lha school's many link courses 
with FE cuDeges. AppDcanu should 
kino leaching subject Interests. RC pit- 
feired. 

MT7TT MDUE'IT fSD) 

Drummond Rond. SF.16 
Tel: m-237 Will 
Roll K|3 

jlcidmnvier. Mr I K. Pritchard 
Requited for Scrvtembci, 1982. Head of 
Careers {Scale 3) There Is a well de- 
u-loped Caiecit programme Irom Year 
f upwards which Is well supported with 
resources flood links hive Men made 
with the Ciieeis sarvki. CamBdatee 
would state tho iubjr.-ii they cm oflai. 
Knowledge nf 16+ cpponuniiles both In 
schools and In Hi is essential 


COMMERCE 


KINfWI AND (SMI 
■Shasklewell Lmtc, Hi 2HY 
Newly fnnned from SqKeintKr IW2 
Tel: nl-254 HT22 
Hull: Affirm. IWW 
Headetasiei: U M. Slmmnns 
Btqulicrl float Scwrmlwr 1981. 
Tear Iter fur (luilnoss Studies (Scale 2). 
Additional iiir.iimiibui concerning dtp 
KhiKtl and the spnoiniment can be 
idKalncd from lhe llcadmasiBl Dedt- 
liaie at T.dltli C'nvtH School, lintltM 
Road. Kinfralaml Knml, Ixindon Nl. 
(Telephone No. RHM 9882). 

ST OHOROC S KC (SM) 
l-aniik Road. Malda Vrie. W9 IRD 
Tel: 01 338 mu 
Hull: 820 

llcadmasier: Mr I N Tultoch 
Requited (tom Scflcmher 1982, Scale 2 
Ten hoi nf Dullness Studies to work 

S ' wiilt 4th aid Jrh year jjupBs 
« (Hi ice Piacilca with Typlni 
and Commerce. Some eiperience ot 
supervising nirplt* <m Cnllep Link 
Cumsos will tv an advantage. 


ENGLISH 


Poatt of Responsibility 


ST OLOROC S RC (SM) 
lanuk Road, Makta Vnle, W9 1RB 
TolOI.32BD9tM 
Roll- 820 

Headmaster: Mr I. N. TuUoch 
Required from September 108a, kale 2 


Required Irom septerawr iwi, a 
Teaiher of llnsllih lo be remooiMe for 
orguBlsing iha work nf the CorIWi D*- 
pa/imrai at the Annau whore lit and 
2nd ye« puplh are Caught- Some ex- 
perience of drama teaching an Xrhrnn- 
taga 

SYDIINIIAM ISO) • 

Danmnuih Rjud, SPJ6 4RD 
Tel: III -MO 6731 
Roll IftOrj 

(IcadmisiKH. Mrs Y II. Zedmwl* 
Required from September 1982, (eschar 
of i iraUth (Scale 3.1 to be rarqtonsJMe 
Ittr m nrdlnaiins the literature for tha 
. lutwar School (Yeats 1-3). Applicants 
aluiuld have caperiance of aronlnlstra- 
rims, mixed aNUtj nnd eumlnsito] 
guup [etching up W and InelBdtng ‘A 


.Scale 1 Posts 

BROMLEY 

bRS&?£y 0orouor of 

THE VVAL611VGMA k., 


fir"6V.30 , 0 K i 8 a n 3 t 8 Bl13 3aR 

fes«STSr , «. n ■ 

i!&. a.’^a.saassrsi 

Partmant Hm C W*l* r “ Do- 


‘he ex o or Isn ca« lo . ■«*!» 

9 b 4 & 

wi IklnSonl 1 * 

•oob oa pOoelbloT (Saji's) 1 “ 


LONDON 


AVON “ 

IP®.. 

avallublo lo" 2 '• 

norlenced app||c B it* ,tBh1 *' ■*- 

fsasSaj tlDnal r *fai832 

BARNET ' 

bSSn?t* * orouo « of 
SCHOOL HILL 8ENIO « HIOH 

approved caaaa asalat- 
waucea d B0Bar a‘lon all3- 

Ta&fc'j lv n |eh Wrl flin fi c*v H « B 53 
S.A.V. <39433 ,' WQ ^/SlVa'd 


BEDFORDSHIRE 

Hlor" 

cSf.& alar: Mr l. j- 

T«l: Ampthin 404408 
on rul| COlnpro,,Hn,lwo - >000 


BERKSHIRE 

gfc^x^g„ c o?{r ,Tv 
w&"Atrft o o ,,Ui si ‘ ,u °" 

•jhool. which la lo Un 
aitnliliihed on iha pramlaaa of 
tha nrsaerit Langley Coi?n?v 

rnrmtgd'iiv “1 b .e 


inwwood „ ‘he^orne? 

MW 

f^“cu r ?r.?L l S^ D,I ^V«°a n Vn*5 

BjftsSE? 

BROMLEY 

pSS£'i?gv BOROUaH OF 

FOR C <hRLs’ ARK school 
E den Park Road. 

KM- anE ‘ 

te™ 1 " aith 8 °° 

ay 


Typino. 
to RsA 


craniCB and 

SSSSShT Hand? 

131833 

COVENTRY 

piflllls— - 

1330 on roll «««■ 

STUDIES h StiJ°r BUSINESS 


ilea 




remedial work 


In ner London Education Authority 

MgjjM S a2Hta*hMi.i,|, 

diir*^bSr lly ' *• oto,in> d,, • >• « 

All Mcondary schools In tho ILEA area are otgjnlstd alono 
oomprahenaiva llrws. 

ILEA la an aqual opportunities umployec 


Part-time Post 


ST SAVIOUR'S A ST OLAVE'S CE 
(SO) 

New Kant Road. SB) 4AN 
Td: 01-407 1843 
Roll: NO 

Required from September 1982, part- 
time (0.4) leacher of English to pin a . 
OauTUhtog dapuioent. Examlnt'lon 
work avail aMe. Letters of application to 
the Headmistress with cv and names of 
two reft re re 


HOME ECONOMICS 


Part-time Poat 

ST SAVIOUR'S A ST OLAVE'S CE 

Bu. Road, SE1 4AN 
Tel: 01-407 1843 
Roll: 300 

Required horn. September 1982. pan- 
Urns (0.4) taacber of Home Econondf*. 
TWo uell equipped roeetelbt rooms. 
LattoB of applkaikm to the Headmh- 
t«m with ev and tumu of two referees. 

MATHEMATICS 


Head of Department 

ST WIUdAM OF YORK RC <SB) 
CHEforel Street. NLODE 
Tel: 01-407 4157/2261 
RoD: 380 

Hetdmauen P. A. Martin 
Required from September or sup. 
'Head of Mwhemaika, Sole ♦ required 
for thfl small toner chy two rite Catho- 
lic boy,' school. which u rotfertag from ' 
a dkmtlcally fslUng roll, Cotnsea eras- 
able In school - CSB and OCE *0' 
Level With the opportunity to apply to 
Midi 'A' Level to tha IsSqgion Sixth 
Form Canlre, KnowWie and-axtwd- 
anca of 8M1LB easouM. . 

Posta of Reaponalblllty 


0EQRQB ORWELL (SM) 

Tutle Road, N4 
Tel: 01-263 1463, 

Roll: 13M 
HearUttanw: 

Scale 2 teacher. SMILE is might to 
mixed sNUty (ton to .iha hm« 
school, CSE, nnd OCE 'O' level teuebi 
at 4th and Jth jam bv«). . 

: 

Tel: 01-381 3M6 

RoU: 1000 • - ■ ■ 

Headmaster. Mr D. E, Own 


ST BERNARD'S RC (SB) 

Wpd Close Si Miuhatf's Row. B Mb- 
it ll Orctn, £ 2 
Tal: (H-m 3944 
RoS: 420 

He admirer. Mr A. T. HifAridgn 
Required from September 1982, Deputy 
Head. of Maths Seale 3. PreleraWy 
CatboKr, wrB quaOfiad teach* r, Counn 
leading to 'A' level. 'O’ level and CSE 
an being taught throughout the school. 

ST MARYLEBONE CH (SOI 
84 Marytebona Hlgb Street. WIM 4BA 
Tel: 01-933 4?W 
RoD: SIT 

Headnmter John Stevenson 
Roqolred hi dally for one sear: encit- 
edeed teacher ut act as Scale 1 second 
to department. 

8oaJ« 1 Poat 


ST BERNARD* RC (SB) 

Wood Close, St Matthew’s How, 
Bethnal Orean.E2 
Tel: 01-739 3944 
Roll: 420 

Hwkntuter M> A. T. Htwfcrldge 
Required from September, 1982. 
Teicher, Scale 1, to teach Maths sod 
Sdaaca. Pre/efably Catbobc. To teach 
than ufejeeb to hath npper and Vnm 
Khoota. 


MODERN LANGUAGES 


Klnavrood Road, Fulham Pateon Road. 

smesN 

Td; 01-381 3806 
Roll: 1000 

Headmaster: Mr D. E. Oreen 
Reqdred from September 1902, Stole % 
SpanWifFrench graduate capable of 
teaching RPX. and wfahh| to aatlst 
with aaooS ngby and cridx. • 


Hoad of Dopartmont 


ST MARK’S CHfSMl 

TWjir^'^ 6110 

Rod: 830 

HeadfnBvter: Mr U W. C. Truman 

'982. a nut- 

sssitisa 
SWstS'Ss;' ■ d '” , *« 

8CIENCE 


Hoad of Dopartmont 

(saf RLES EDWARD brooke ce 

Uniton Rand. SW9 
Tel: 01-735 8763 

Roll: 360 with rbrivin. ibnh Form 
Coasonlum 

■ Mre Ane Cumfawsk* 

Required from Se Member, Hoad of 
Chemistry (Benin 2j to be rmpooifeln 
JJL »°»JM throuabout the ichool 
O nod A louds) and to (harw 
LomMecd Sdence In yean 1 and 2 
Committed Christian preferred. 

Posta of Responsibility • 

QEOROE ORWELL (SM) 

Ttaila RoatL N4 
Td: 01-2631465 
Roll; 1330 
Headrafitrin: 

Fhffta; aa bictcai la 
electron ks and/or lechoouay wooM be 
on advantage. Lam prut read ve Da- 

CLWSffl 

level teaching avaDabto. 

HENRY COMPTON (SB) 

Ro * d ' Fi,a>m ” Jwtf Ro ^- 

Tel: 01-381 3606 
Roll: 1000 

Headmaster Mi D. E. Omea 
RranlRd tea September 1982, Scale J 
2oalfc In Scfutce deputmem. irttifhi fa 
langfai to wan I ud 3 and optton 
counet h TMa. Ommlnsy. ftototy 
and Human BMm ito offered fa yttoi 
A A 5. A rlewl Biology and Physics. 

Am toteftot bi Elect ranks wttid be 
an advaatage. 

Part-flms Poat 

gSAVIOUR-S A CT OLAVE'S CB . 
New Kai Road, SEI 4AN 

JSsW" 


NURSERV 

r SCHOOLS 


.. . r- ,'Vl i ro m a aam j. UQURH HUIU 

BWo^ sdaKes am weU suhreribed 
aljJjfi and dlh fbnn leveL Letters of 
appbcaHon ut the Heidmhtrctt with cv 
Wd names of two referee,. 


TECHNICAL STUDJE9 


CARDINAL MANNINO RC (SB) 
St Qa ties' Square, W10 BEL 
Tol:OI4692r9a 
Roil: 624 

HeadmasieR T- O- Oroua ■- 


CENTRAL FOUNDATION OIRlS’ , He admail w: J. O. Oronaa ■- 

31-33 Dow Rond. E3- ■ • Requliod from I.9.R2. Pan-ttoia fO.d) • 

Tel: 01-981 1U1 • • tMdior of OrnWcal Omuanfcniton 

RoS: 920 within the technical studies davarnwat. 


S tore Sapwriw “ «■ 

, Scale 2Maihtmrtlc« Mirfw. 
fa ufdtOoa to (caching enmbvsilon 
dames, lha soeeaad^ eandliateMB be 

expected to oonllnoe * ,v *Pg tI 5' 

of tbe school's o« CSRMode 3 
coune. Here is «fe> a poksWUty of 
' uKtong eoraputor inari: 

NOTRE DAME HIOH RC (SO) 
LIB&CWTR^. SB) 


Tdi 01-981 IUI ■ 

RoU: 920 

HMftelureu: Mm EHabath Smith ‘ 
Required map or for lammiy 1983, 
(tend of Mute, Scab 3. 


PHYSICAL EDUCATION 


Hood of Departmant 


ST SAVIOURS A ST OUVffS CE 


HEADSHIP 


ROBERT OWEN (N) SCHOOL 
^wlay Strew, Blackwell Lane, 5EI0 

« invited from teachers 
wflh trafnlni and experience In nururv 

*5“™? W ”*o*hip JfritK 
V3 pan-rime. Burnham 

HOtooaend foobeap saa far aiw&ca- 
tlon form and funbn details totha 
Mere. EO/TSIUBA. Corot- 
ly HaU. London. SEI 7PB. Ctoilng data 
4 j!5? ° f CD,,, * ,,e “ ,, WMeatioa 


SPECIAL 

EDUCATION 


BQARDfNQ SCHO OLS 
Poatt of- Raaponilbllfty 

S52ffi GHSCHOOL ^™y 

Ormip 4fS) 

Htwfan aster:-/. R. Wart 

Restored fnflq September, 1982, 

duria up to 15 hour* per weak, far 
"Web an allowance o4 fl.7M Li pay. 
6hk. Aoeomawditfon avdlobte, at nan- 
dart! charge. 

RAYNERS1PENBURY GROVE 

™ b»?Gr bo - Bockf 

ta - 

IfaadaiiJier Mr C. A. Jonas 
Required wap, Experienced Tcjaftet of 
Ua*pcaf. Sous 3s to tale rapoosJEdihy 
for Lower school with putlnjar pamh- 
aaa on cwmcwlBin dev-ckrooieat and Lo- 
service Lrainlcg. 

The school opeiatea « iwp Ur;,. 
Teadierw required tp undertake - 
■OPJutoI aiteaaeiHi* dutki. accow- . 
modi don avaEiMe. 

3cafa 1 Post* 

XAYWERSffBNBURY OROVE 
Roll; 83 (All ago mbtod. Hearing • 

S3 ' 

llfoin September. Semlo 2 + 
SSA teacher, of ibe deaf required ut 
uh« teitcral iub)ecu. Maibs/iwal id- 
« ««R tm adriniage. 13 hoon per 
.Builca required far 
M II.7M p a. payable. 

. Vnftarnhhed 3 bedrewmed houu la 


tlnfurntehetl 3 bedrewmed houu hi 
Wen Gteen ivtfliUe «l maderd 
;«*». Stah resMcttiUI occomnoda- 
ttoft are liable (n school. 


u Kent Rtted, SEI 4AN 
1 0I-W7 1843 


with ev and lhe Bttaa u 
two rafereei. 


Tdi 01-407 1843 . 

RoS: 500 ; 

Requited hum September 1982. wall 
quaiffled and oroerieocod teacher ai 
Hud of Phpleaf BddMiton. Scab 3. 
Fat&hlai todude omIh pttbaB ud itn* 
oil courts and tapes 6aW a> M*teh. 
Pbflbar danlh from lha Hcufahteta 
to whom. It dare of ippUcidoa. wllli pr 
and uaiou of mo referee, should bn 
seat bf Wednudsy. 26 btey- 


MARY 

-iont s 


Port of RaaponalbifHy ; 

ST STEPHENS IM ft I (N) 

Doner RoadSWS ■ 

Td: 01-735 1023 
Roll: 204 

Hewhnlairum: Mbs P. J. Gibbons 
1 Required from Seplarijbar 3902 or atop. 
An csriiusluttt and cxperreotxd Christ' 
last uaelvai to taka nsporiribffiiv far a 
recepdro/middle or. top Infant Cram. A 
Scale 2 post li oHbKtf for the dnefap- 
monl and ttru store of nuLhs and reft nee 
throughout (he school. Previdus ipofi- ’ 
cants will be dnuMned. 


DAY SCHO OL ' 
D*pirty Heo</«hip 

Roll: M a| present 

Hearinrester: Mr M. L Qiwtau ' 


• r. v ! 


lit,.:'! 

-.b 'I W.: 


>.)■ ii 

h • ' . 1 

:• t. : 

,V V'i 
3:be*- 1 
!•>•■< ■*/ 
:? . i.i s -. 

=i$i 

ii « 

*.! : • , i » 

; . 

i.:- . y 1 1 

! jj - - ; 
t? \ r'i*A 

^ . '‘r’l.-i 
;• 

• 7. >-■ 

, w • 4 fL'J 


iiW: 


■ ‘ V r • i? • 

■ .0 : 1 

' --.i:; . Vf.- 

• Ji 1 

• 

■ Vl'r hi 

fiifi 

W:Wi 

«• 

•• < r-:i 

4'fcfej 

'ii” l-!.’,.v 

M 

'I'kr- ' '-A 

. 1 ? -:*f? 

' 3'ru:**- 
- sj(f 5S 
?;■ rli 

Si - ’ 

a tM 

I’fii. 

.;I#T :f Km . ■ 
■■■' ' ;>^aH 







'» i , !i 

•t 1 • i 


i * i 
\ ;* 

»• 

■if 
it -f. 


5 1 j£j| ’• 

rl 



SECONDARY COMM 
SUBJECTS 


AVON COUNTY 

THE l.'ABTLI- SCHOOL 
Pork Uuiiii. Tiuirnliui’v. 

Hr Into! .Util 3 IHT 
SECHETAHIAL KTHIJIFN 
SCALE I. 

Rmiulrad for Snplriiihi-r. u 
rulltime iPiirliar (Sl'hIk II i»l 
Typlnn and Short hand. in 
iMCh w l tli In Hip mpmnJIini 
Cnmmrnn nopur luioii I . which 
1 b parr of the CrnmlVu r*icul- 
ty. Till' ulilllty TO If arli Offlcr 
Prncllco. litis Inna* Hludlim Mini 
Co mm arc o will he an uilvuii- 
taae. Most trni-liinn i» within 
thn 6 tli tai'iii t>f 200. 

Thin In a mltmi II - 1H 
t-oiniirnlicnsi vn mluml, villi* 
1,400 punlln. In <■ tionil ro* 
nliLonllnl nrnn- 

alter uf nniiliratlim. 
unci iiiniien ul 2 rnliirmi, til 
lleailiiiuntrir , linnimllnti'lv. 
(39UH7) 1318'J'J 


HILLINGDON 
LONDON nonot'cil tlF 
mi. LINO IION 

HAYES MANOIt SCIIflOl. 

IVoml Luil Orat‘11 Hi mil . 
Haven Mltlilli’fiex 1 1 OS !1SE 

iNnmUar un roll 1004 — 
144 in Hlxlli Form I 


Hetiulrnil Neptomber 
1082 a tpncliar of Cninmer- 
clal Subjectn (Seals 1 1. 
tea chi tin O.P.. Com men *■ 
and Typimt In tluilantn 
from Hie 4tli — Alii Fcirmn. 
in Hpealiillal nrriiiiiiiiucla- 
II on. 

flayas Mminr In a nix 
Itirin mi try Liinipranruihlvp 
an an nilnutivu nltn. Outnr 
LoiidiiH Al I own nt a Pnv- 
ahla. 

Pleaau apply hi the Hml 
instance by Inner to the 
Head of the School htntlnn 
thn names amt addrnnncB of 
two roferaos. (39244 i 

131832 


HUMBERSIDE 
EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
SCUNTHORPE DIVISION 
BIDDINGS COMPREHENSIVE 
SCHOOL 

Endnrby Road. Suunthurpe 
Hcail Tencher: T. Ellin 
No. tin Hall; 94 0 
Hatiulratl for Snpitiinbnr. 
1982, Toucher of CI>M- 
MERICAL BUnjECTS (TYPE- 
WHITING/OPFICE I'llAi:- 
TICEl ■ ficnlo 1. 

Aiipllrutlon fiirmii mill 
fnrtlier fiartli iilnrJi ulilulnolilc 
from the Hand Teacher at llir 
School, to nvlitnn cfimpli'leil 


LFICESTEKHIIIHE 


TIIK RAWLINS HPPI-.lt 
SCHOOL AND 
COMMUNITY CCll.t.rtil' 

I iiiiiihlniriiiiiili ltii.nl. 

(Juoru. Nr. l.oiiiihliiirMiinli. 

I ». 

In llir I.kIi enti-rnlilri- iilnn 
for llir hi naiilMii ion ■■■ 
ni-riiinliirv i-i I lira 1 1 ml 

Itiipnr 14- 1H 

Hall I-J93 

II USI NESS ST1IIIIE.S 
Scale I — 'iViiiiuirHri' 

llntiulroil Aniiiint. Tor 
one year only to rover 
s n mini (linn I . The d ••■•n i-t - 
■limit 1 1 an well min hi liliril 
cuiirKun in Lcnnoiiilcn iinil 
111 ml in-nil MtiiilieH to aill 
Irvi'ln. An ability to Irnrh 
*A' level t'c i if 1 1 1 ill I ' i wnnlil 
tin ail ml van la nr . 

l : nriher iletnlln tram Itin 
Ilf nil. Apply I in inpilliilfl v ■ 
inn formal with full pni-- 
llriiliii-H anil numi'ti and 
iiilill-miam uf two reiernnn 
Uanl. (3110391 I.MH22 


NEWHAM 

LONDON imilOlH'il! (II 

NKWIIAM 

ST. JOHN'S CAT 1 1 flf. I 

sculmi.. 

(iri-i-ii Street. Liuiilon II 1 A 

UAX. 

Hand Taai.-her: E. J. M. I.nwn. 
No on roll; 723 iiuixcil) 
TEACH Bit Ol IHIBINLNh 
STUDIES (purl -lime ) Kruie I 
i-rnulrntl Knptenibor. 1982. 
One tip more part-turn- 
loui-hers of IIunIih-nh stiulli--. 
in lie ri’N|iiniH||i|i> tor i\*ie> 
wrltlim. Mfflii- I'rni'iii I-. 
HIiiii-i Imncl or Coiiiiniii-i e lo 
Ptlliilt KxilJilliiiKliiii li-vel. Ia- 
pi-rlc-in-i- In I he uni* in Mlirnn- 
riici-iMani anil iii-vv of lint 
Tec linn limy won lit In- nu 
lidded nil mill util- . Vhlll. wnl- 
i •imr il - Tr I ; (II 3!13 A I (12 . 

■ Loiiclon A I In ■vniii-r - £7 .VI. 

Applliuiliin forms (n.u.e. 

iivallnlilr no m tin* 
nud Tnui-her. «r, whom inin- 
plated fornin ntumlil be re- 
turned by lnt June 1982. 
Director of Eilueutliin. LUufu- 
I Lo u Off Iren, ilrouiUviiy, Strat- 
ford. Lnnilun EI5 4811. 
(39228) 1.11822 


rurmt * Mould bn roiurnnti nn 
Inter than Slat May. 1982 
(I’.s.a.e. please). (39162) 

131832 


Inter than 


LEICESTERSHIRE 

THE GHAMMAR SCHOOL 
I.elLOalur Hnucl. Atfhliy dr 
la Zourh. Leiaa. 

In Hie Leli-eatnralilrn plan 
far flit- on in ulna tli in of 
MHiniilnry nuiirallmi. 
t»p per 14-18 

Hull 1171 
COMMEItCt; 

Sen In I 

Hentliri'il Aliniinl. njnlui- 
nluHtli- a ml |irefnri-fi<l ex- 

r nrlencpd 

earner Hi .tiikn renpuiisi- 
ililllty fm- nliurthand . and 
typing euurnra (n mnnll but 
Imiicirlunt dnpartninnt. - 

Vurthni* data l In from the 
llnad. Apply immediately 
flip foi'itml wllli Tull iiitr* 
tlcidara and .names unil 

WSffKI’.j'ifoSt:," ‘"{SVh'ffii 


NEWHAM 

!^&?&K« BOKOUD ' 1 m ' 

LITTLE ILFORD SCHOOL 
Hrimnlna Mom l, Liiinjuu F.I2 

II nail Teacher ; Mr K. J. F.xi-n 
Kumlinr on roll: I2H5 
nilfilNIiSH STIJDir.S 
1 EACI1EH 
St ain I 

Eleiiulrml Hnpteinln-i- lf»82. To 
tnarli mo I My typlnn in tfilh 
wc 1 1 •eatn bl tali ml mixed mnllj- 
cultural rnninrefienalvii 

school. Ability to teach Ci mi- 
ni ere n and Aci-oimtN would im 
an nasal. Preliminary vlaltn 
■WpHutJin- Tel: 478 8024. Lon- 
Allowunce: 4738 piun Ho- 
i.llil Priority Allowance. 

Application forma fa.u.e. 
iiIobbo) available from thn 
ll/iad Tnut-Her. to whom tun- 
pie toil furmn almulil be rn- 
tiirnnd |jy Ini Jiinn 1982. 

Dime tor of Kdui-ntlon. EiIiil-ik 
L ion orrirn. Briiiiiliviiy. Ht,ii- 
Loudon F. IH 41111. 
(39233) 131822 


OLlllIAM 
MLTlmrDLIIAN 
millDIKIlIA OF 01.1)11 AM 
U) 1 1 CATION COMMITTEE 
IIA DC.T.VITE SCHOOL 
lirnadwav. Climlilorton, 

ClldiiHRt i , 


LEICESTERSHIRE 

MIA U fcJI^NT ^ LEYS 
Ansiey I. ana. l.nlcoauir 

IIUHINUHH IIDUCATION 
Brolo I 

. Unnnlrnd ' A uu mil 


KMtcaiitrctd for Meptumiior, 
1UH3, nt l lib) 11.18 Miami 
Cuiiiprnlinnalvn neliuul or nil* 
nut 1130 nupllft, Hl-dId 1 
tnunlmr of Uiialiieaa Htmllnn. 
to tunali 4lh. 8lli and pimalbly 
.0th form irlUHBUH. Oirii.n Pi-iw 
H en. .Tyiu'wrlllnii. Hliurtiianil. 
and C.unimnriTu. in (:.(•■&.. 'll 1 
level nr It.H. A. nxiuiilnnEUiti 
Itivol. 

Hand N.p.n. lor unnlU-utloii 
form tu flni lleutl i*t tip* 
School. rptih-naVL" *•» him Im- 
niedlutalv. (388431 1318'ais 


WEST SUSSEX 

fV.WJI/H 11 . 0 . HCIIOOI. . 
(lailtnll A vuniir . Hiiywurifa 
llnath, VV Husanx. Hill 8 BI'.T 
Not- ¥6o. CJi'qup \o. Kl "xml 
rurhl vtinipr'nfienelvn. loo VI 
form 


rancher for Uiialnnne alu- 
dlna/Htuiiuinirit/iypliiii and 
oinrn uracilca to Juju n 
(levnlpiiiiin uualnoia eifune- 
Han fnculiy. 


1'iirthar detail a iroin (he 
. . (’ot-maP wltYi’TuU *i&X 


Ocular* anti nctmnR uDh 

. r fsvnt 


J’ ,,l WV Ueciulretl Suiiliiiiihiu- hihu full 

"V.; JlE", reiieluir of coiiinuircn 

I,,,® 111 ' IHcolo 111 lo tniic-ji to ■IP 

••is™" . 'fe* 

n» ' iii^fuiKiV'Ciii!, 1KSJBUU; 
rr«V“ S'litmt fiii-thor mfornm. 

?SWII IiMIIh; Wfc»oS"r3ffll» 


r'.GYNGORaH-— - 

pypBD 

v ; TOUNTY GOUNCL 


. EDUCATION AUTHORITY 

8BBHV8TWYTH " J 


edocaHonal n-18: N3. on toll 1 16tn 
Mind for 1st Seownber, iees. < - 


Aflittda MMhw of 
, Them la the po; 

|i AppW«ttk«a fa 

• «urrt«utiim 


earnmiim ' 

■ ■ . • - i - a- 

W tMra^on^ pqr tu ) 

b* relumadi^^^i^<S^ 

, . ...... 


n 


M 


STAFFOKDHIIIUE 

r.tllICA THIN I -l)M Mil Ti l 

■ IA(lLi:V I* Alt K 

ft IMI'll l.m. NW1V1'. N(H()lll 
liurill hill Linn-. It mu- lev. 

wsi.1 311/ 

llf-iinli i'<l Ini' Siiiili-mlii |- I ■Uf.! . 
-VhSIh I AN 1- rl.AITir.il Ol 

CDMMI HI 'I Al. aim .11.1 I *■ 

I a. all- 1 I Mm m I I |1 |1«- - 

vnliiplllll llx niniiilrrrliil ilr- 

■ >.ir i mrii t mill I-* Nf-i-klau in 
iipimhit a iimi lu-r Inr t \ !••- ■ 
writ Iiiii , n| ||i « pi-ip III i- mid 
A* rniiuts. Tin- Milili-ilH iim 

• iff 1 hi Minimii. In tin- 4ili. 

hill mill All! ymii’h illlil ■•-■III III 
0.1 II. 'O' Irvi-I. f.S.r mill 
II. S. A. nsiiiiilliiillnlla. All III- 
ll-ri-ai In nuiiin uniiirnl 
■niitlp-mntli a li-ni-liliui woiihl 
Im an iuIvu n t mm. 

A liplli-nl I iiii fnruiH iilitalli • 
■■bin from and i-i-iiirii-ildi- In 
tlu- llmul triii imr la.ii.n . I. 

All ■l|i|illi-aula iiit- n-ikril In 
llittn Hint II Is thn I'niialv 
I ' ■ >lim-l I ■ a view thill II In ilr. 
slrnhln rnr tln-h i-ni|iliiii-ri in 
Im mr-nitn-ra uf un ii|ii-ni|>rliiti- 
'I null" 1 1 iilnn . i.im4 | i*ii 13IU2; 1 . 


Computer Studies 


llAVKItlNIJ 


IONIHIN llOllOOtill III 
IIAVI'.ltINIi 

miu.si i uiiiii s« i |i «i ii 

(llnll 1300 t'n. Lai ■ 

l.i n Inf’ luili-, I'nllli-r Run. 

lliillilnril. IIM r > 21 11 

MAI lil.MAl It'S. St M f | |r. 

•lull nl ai.pt ■- 1 ii lii’i I 'III',* An 

ulllliliBliisI P Ii-.ii lirr III Inin ii 

liirur it ii till- lli-pill-l im* til wllli 
ii iiiimIi-i'ii uiitlimli. 

I in- fiirtlii-l- ■!«'(•« I la plrn-ii- 
spi- mil- ml* m l Isrini m iiudri 
Mci iilul.iri Mnlll-i. Si n|r I 
1 B 'LI-Vi) 1 32UU-.1 

OX t’ORDSHIRK 

ciuiNrv ronNcu. 

IIANIIl'HY St 'll i II 11 
Ihidln lloml. ll.iuliuri . li\IA 

(*rouoi> 14 ii i-i|<-r.il. .TJiMi 
pupil" In ' Hulls. I 1 • I n niul 
Oppnr srlinul l*i-l*ll 
lti-i|l*lr* , tl li«r lii-iilrinlirr I'lHJ. 
n spri liillsl In lulu llir |ir . 
Ilill-Ulirill Ilf t'nmiMItlliu Si Inn 
•-•*■ iilih' In I -m Ii ul nil Inva-l-i 
null In t-ulniul Inin ul Ii- nil 
nil- ulll—r ailh im I nri-ri. All 
lutnrcst III i ■■lilltil Ini liunlniii 
nr -lei tl-nuli s wmild |m wnl 
i-nniP. 

Apply liv li'tli-r. I in liiilliiu 
liill-lb il 1 II ph uf ijiiii llfli ill limn . 
• 'Xpl'lTl'III 1' illlil iiiiumis nl two 
■ ninri-tiH. ns sunn u* piiaiililv 
In I In- I'rliu Hml . ITirilini- ill-, 
lulls ill nlliililii. S.A.L. pli-usn 
f.VIBAm I.YJIIU2 


Scale 2 Posts and above Staffordshire 


AVON 

COUNTY III AVON 

Till. CAVn.l. -SCHOOL 

Pill k It ■ mil. T liiii'llliurv . 

ItrlHlnl. IIS 12 IIIT 

COM 1*1 I T Kit BTUDII.H - Hi .ill- 

Itt'uu Irr ■! Inr Hi-uitimhar. -i 
leuill-r (Sr-iln 21 tu I iikn 
rhurflf til Cnmpiili-r MlitllfiH. 
There urn ns lull lit lied -A' 
Invel coiirxna, and a nun-yrnr 
6th farm ruurar. Cuminilcr 
profirammoa arn wall ilr- 
vnlnpod lor uilmlnlairntlve 
purpose a: tlio person 

appoliltnd will be exportod lo 
encournue such use, a* wall 
as general tompulnr educa- 
tion. A contribution to llir 
teaching nf Mathematics, ir 
possible to Ath form Invele, 
will alxn be roimlred. 

Thla in n urowiiiii. mixed 
1-18 rnnmreUr- naive aclinnl. 
With 1.400 pupils (200 In the 
6th fiinn). In a iinud rnshhin- 
tlnl (iron. 

Letter uf iiuplirutlnn, C.V.. 
ajitl names of a refernen. tu 
llnudmaalor. Imnietllntnly . 
(4436-1) 132020 


BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 

WVCJOMIIL DIVISION 
WF.LLESnOURNE SCHOOL 
KIiiiihIiIII Itoud, Turrlura. 

II Iqn WyLtinibe. 

J-"- Sharp. D.A. 
Hull; 86 (I mixed. 

Haiiulrdd Tor Srptninhnr 1982, 
tuacher ur Comoutnr fituillno 
utni Muthomntlca lo "O' und 
'A* Invel. Scale 8 punt avail- 
able for Hullnbly tinullflnd unil 
uxpnrinnrud r.nudldutn. Rnun- 
hiirHemunt ur rnmtlvnl ex- 
■lensi'H, 7.6% ul town nrr cm 
•filial ami r.siair Aiuuiis fens 
l maximum miyainni L76UI giiil 
111*- llloiltsl 1 rx|llUiMnr. of £129 
nay able In unproved i imnn. 
I It him mi A llu warn it pniKlluti 
rvuuival also imvnlilo In 
■inpriivnil i-nnnn. 

L.ollnru uf iinplli-iiiliin. 
uuullnn two rnftuiies. to In- 
returned to llu- Ht'iitliiiuMt-r 
ns biuiii nn prinxililn. (338731 

132020 


EAST SUSSEX 
COUNTY COUNCIL 
HEATHFOiLlj 8CIK. 


IIRATIIFILLD SCHOOL. 

(.n«|n Htrenl, lleuilirinld TN2I 

UKiJ 

ttpnutrolHtnNlvn in lx tnl 1 1 - 
18, liono ul* roll. I'.io sixth 
(nrmorx) 

lieiiulrnd Hunteniher. 1982/ 
January. IUH3, Tuurlmr re- 
■■■iiunihLii for Copipiiiur Hlu* 
ulna anil lo tnurii Miillumiii- 
1 1 *-■*». Hiuile 2. 

ItoliKurlun urn inn iivallulile 


III approved ninna. 

ApiiIIi-uIIuii foi-ina niul 
rurihnr ilrituUa (s.n.K. jdtiunnl 
rroni the lliiuilmanim-, Clunino 
tluie 4 1 Ii June. (3na.nl) 132020 


ESSEX 

l-'OUNIJATIUN 

<.|ienltir KuitiL L.nuiilituii Kl|f) 

IvLftTfdK'fAYiRftsyiitiAL.: 

S": 

ynloii turn nubjnet to ‘a* 

Soma inutlinmaiien 

tnaeiilnn In required. ■ 

, — — ■ — ----- — r * ■ - - u . . . 

91IBFPIBLD 


I.OUCATKIN COMMIT Tf.l. 
CflllHAl.l. lllfill KCIKKII. 
r.llldlts l.unr. Coilsiitl. 
Wtilvcrliuiuptnii 
ili-Miilri-d inr Hi-pi-inhi'i'. 

I 'fill! a ii i-ii i linsl ii'-i I, unil -,n |* - 
uhlv ■iiiiilifii-ii 1 1 At. HI. I* 
(Si all- I l in ili'kuliip tlii- 
ft'iichliiu id COMI'I ' II. Il Slll- 
lllf'.s ,il (III li-Vi'In. II is linpril 
lllnl Hut iinrsuii ii|’i>i ilnt — il will 

III- II Inn Illlil' III HNilnl Iittii-I 

ili'iiariiiieuiH In link i-lnpluii tli- 
uf fm five use u| tlin i-iiiilp- 

iiirnt . 

Applliuiliin forma obt.iin- 
ulilti from and retni-unliln In 
thn Headleurlirr is.ii.t-.l. 

All upplli-iint" lire uskril In 
note that It Is tin- l.nuutk 
Cuunrll 'I- view that it la ilr- 
xlrabln for tlu-lr c-uiployneh to 
bit members of mi upruprlue 
Trade Union, (30492) 132022 

WEST SUSSEX 

IMUEKIIOKNF .SCHOOL. 
Iniberliurne Lunc, r.uu 
Urlliatauil. Sussex 
Hi-alo I 

II - IB Cuuiurehenalvn 

Tt'urlinr of c.Tnnpii ter Nl utiles 
rt'uulri-il lor Nepieiulier in 
lain 1 uvnr anil ifi'vi'lup this 
newly Inti it iiniideul ileiiurl- 

nienl. 

Thu luliliil leni Ii lu'i • iiiiiuiii • 
(unit would liii-linlr H niul A 
level i Inastia to an luf ruiliu - 
lorv tuurau fur all iliildren 
llu hum II jj roups with uili-roU 
IP Year One. 

Aniiilriiiita from iiiiii imitlin. 
matli-lniia wuultl lie m-repi. 
able. 

Detnlla niul lorni from 
lluntllonrher • £,(,. 23962. 

(39301) 132022 


Economics 

Heads of Department 

ESSEX 

M n N COUNTY lllfill 

^ JHiax 1 - i,n 

Ill'll it I red Ne|]|i'iiilii-r. .Suhlml 
tnuiiht hi C.H.T.., '()' unil 'A' 
levelH. Hrilhi 3 for iipiiruiirlnlit 
expi-rlCUC-e, lull Hi nt ii|i|iidiil - 
iiiiuiil roiiHliliuriL 
. Aoplv linnituliultilv l»y teller 
to lluitiluuiHier. uni- 1* utriin ■ i 
with iiiiiui'H unil itriflreavnx ul 

jggM WalAi 

Scale 2 Posts and above 

NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE 

IM?YA1. llllAMMAIl HCIKIOI, 
liakdiiln Trri'iiiiii, Nnwraailii 
Hltffli Tvi* 1 *. N 1,2 <II)X 
jlMc, filri'iit (irnnt/ 
(■■ilniiniulKiil. ,6110 III filxtli 
I oriu, 

Wniilml for . Hnti tnin Imr 1*182 
Ht. J HijVJX J *«MN f U« AhlfATI. 
I'.C.IlNOMlHT to iiinkii (t Malm- 
mini r I hut l tin, uioaflv at Nlxiu 
I'«*ri8 level In this Inipui'inui 
dPlini-ttmiiit td tlin HrliiHil. 
Buljiry (luriilinui Benin 2. 


deiini- linn lit td the Hi hool. 
Biij|iry llui'uliniu Hi:nln 2. 

1-urlliiu' I it* ur inn tlin* Im 

available Irunl thn lleuduiaa- 
‘(h*. , to, . vvfuiin H|i|ilIi-at|oiin 
HliinilU bn aant at (utL-n will) 


luniliniii Hiuiln 2. 

H' lilfurinntliiii Im 
i Irunl llpi llnuiliiiaa- 
. vvhuin H|i|*l|i-at|oiin 


$edle .1 Posts 


BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 


rurrloiiliim vltun mid tim 
nanieM of two rerurnna. In 
via w of Lilli urgnnuy laliintiona 

fmva-iavn. m 

132220 


Scale 1 Posts 

BEDFORDSHIRE . . 

SOUTHERN AREA 
^EENShURY U FI* Bit. 

UnrjDdalo Road, Dunatable. 

UQn dm Intro mo: MIhb. G.M. 

lisffes 

■pfer^afe-altJriE 

J30J vary dealbbla. Scale. 1. 
v, APPRoaUun fprnin "■ are 
from find return- 

BERKSHIRE 


U'K r| MI^-„t,^T„, NALS| | ln B|Mt> 

'Z™ ISiB'a'ssj&x 

■ h 11 - ■ 60101 

■lr.^ip£ n b S «Vo E ?' an « HV 



hr C..S-L. level, u *°9r«pl)7 gj 

'n 1 *"* '! HI forn.. 

i-lnuVSr ,3 B 'oW«P m gs 

•« tn I MUll 

Mf I\MI ITfriPTH, « a ■ 

■ 1,11 I'Himni HUMBRR8IDE 

.rttiniU.,^ » T1 oj,co MMni# 

m.immu. c!SiTOB!lw«. i 


IIIM'KINI HIAMHIUKE 

t iiiin rv i-iinNi H 

4'iV. , ;. n " ,,,,v ‘• ,,vmmau 

Wullull II I. A» I ■- n 11 ■ 1 1 % 

n-u 1 Irmhrr K Ii 1 1 1, . 

IImII I.Imi) i4f.ii in •.nil, 
l Ml in i 
ulr I 

It ••■■•■Il I'll XrtitPualM-! . ... 

«>*■ tn Inin lit- | i iiiidiiii, 

In >•'■■■ Ii llu ■Miiili.i.it 
"I lilt, d 1,1 A M mill Unix i-ralt k 
?«i In -l.it >,hl|i l-t-i * ’ 

,,n *'-l tn 1l-.iiliii.i"||. r 
•llkliui iinnirx nf rnlri--- 

Anhliliiir mill i-uinval r»l 

.‘".-'.V' aSaV!.V" 1,1 “t'l'fitved 

(TIEHIIIRF. 

••ANDIIACII Nl tlOOt. 

-•niiillini 1». | In. olH, r 

Itrilllll ril fel *-r |,t -iiilmr |«)H2. 
'• ** "i i « "NiiMirs 

Ft ll V Mi.’V 11 HNMI.NI- A 

NlMUll-IU il K« |i,,, || |, „ link** 

1 I ■ I II I Mill |, l r hr lln|% •• ( N I) |t 

'» rt'l- l lu- "* In 1 1 . 1 I* 

drill, lull miri'ta nuly I'iiiiuIv 

(ink " 

.. I dll deiiilla iiv ■i||,i|i|i. rnun 
Hu llruilui inlri Sninllim Ii 
■u IimmI I rrur Itiuul Snuil - 
hm h. t . lii-xli i it- . I'wll iiNr 
In ii |il-u«i-i i4.(36.'il 
132222 

nKKIlYHHIKK 

111)1. it *VI.It SI'lli 1(11. 

Muiir.iirr l.niu . Iliihiiini-, 
f-h-m.'. ri. i.i H.I4 (,\A 
I. 1 .. f, MUl|Urlu'UMVe 

N II II. I 2611 i In, lulling I4|i 
lu VI I in nil 

I mi t•l'|■l-■lll■l■| . t-ni hri nl 

I • Miiiiinli -i nnrl-'i II Al I ,'lllltn In 

'A' Irk I- 1 I hr llrum-liiii'iit 

nffrla , illlrii'i lu lMi-tliii-i,-i "III- 
die* nl t S.i . -I l- l-vri, 
K.k.A. mill H. | .1 "• nl,. |. 

I.rtli-i* <i| nl'lilii nl luu , wllli 

» nrrli it I him vita- mnl ilriuiis 
uf ixvn rrlt-rre*. riir lie- ml - 
ilitiairr IS A I. iil-.ixc ) 

Darhyahire CtiiiufV cnmu-ll 
is an aqiuil i>nie>riiiulty nm- 
(ility-r. I4H124I 132222 

DUDLEY 


MFTItfSFOl.lT AN 
HOItOI'l.ll III IIIIDI.KY 

1IIOII AitCAI.t. SCHOOL 
11 Kill Ari ul IH-lvr. Sriluli'k . 
Ilutllry. VV mi M ul liiiuta 
Kiroiiii II - 1 2 • ) H i-ii-ril 
■ tnnu t . <lfil) »u roll I 

I HI Srnlemln-r (iltAI)ll- 
ATI. I I At III It nl I.CIINI). 
Mills and I DM.MI III ) in 
*11, Ilf |U ll-lll lllfill I lll-ni- 

suit l—i ut nil li-vrlx. In- 
clluilllu -il a I Ii Inrui. 

A|i*dli ill Inn I iiriiii'iii-- 
!••! !•• fi'tiMi llriifl IT-iii her. 
IB'ini I l 132222 


GLOUCESTERSHIRE 

C III. 1.1T. N II AM IIOUIINSIDI 
SCHOOL 

1‘li-nmt arr lull uilVrrl undi-r 
f*i iilr I I'linis Sei'tmilnrk Hi*- 
Inrv . (311 1 76) 132222 

BEDFORDSHIRE 
NIIHTIILIlN AIII A 
I'll. (HUM lll'FLIt SI 111)1)1 
llrlrk Hill llrlve. Ili-ilfm ■) 


■Yltari? 1 ^ JSp? 

■ro, n .j K c pp, S t C"£3 

tea* barn. Thia i a 

,nZ VnlntmBnl “S 

' « « l»" r' 1 “l i'foPMi Uo^o^ JS 

“•'le I ruin ttis IIoHd TeirhlSil 


H rnd in ii* tnr It. Ctirnw rll 
'lei- lleilf urd 9H6 I 2 
(tl'OIIU IK, 13 • IH 


■'(illiui'ulii'li'il **-. Nn. "ll roll 
IIAu. --IXtli f oriu 2'ltt 
lti'qull'i'il Inr Si'iiti'uilu-i I'lH-.l. 

il il'll' lii'l- ul l.l lllllllllll * .Mill 
lllialut'nn SI Uillr-i . Sm|e I . A 
iirmliiiilf' In ■M'l'il-'il kv In • I'- 
ilbll' In Illlil )> er nimniii n III 
‘A* level. HliNllli-t-s Simile-, 
mid ( '«i ul in rrnt tn 't r Ink el . 
An llllui-eat III fem Iilnn null- 
<• anuilmil Inn l.i ■iiiniuli x niul 
liutiixlrhil Htudli-* iiiriink tin- 
illll II tv ru Hill- In I lie 4 ill mill 
Sill Vt'iir* wnillil lie Weli-iulU d 
An luluruat 1*1 Innuliui ion- 
HUT* is llli ■'iniil ove r* wuultl 

Im tin uilk tint uni' . There I 

IIUIMlMilIlt niul v r ImiiIiiii -ireu 
nl llu- iTirrli-iiliiiii . lliilh rx- 
Iti'i li-iii ml mill Ui-kVlk 'iitiilll tril 
trill luir" ill " lltk I It'll tu -iiiii 1 x, . 

The Ni-hnul In all null'll In ,i 
ul ■man lit rualiliinl In I iiren lo 
Nut tli Heilluiil 

•\ * ■ ■■ 1 1 ■- ■■ 1 1 ■ in Inr in'' mnl 

( urllier ilnlail* iiVulliihlr ll nui 
hr ll|iftlllil<M)l ■'( . a.n.e. 

|ili-*ine. I*|r nan itmily I ul - 
ilii'illn Irlv, I3*IM|12) l3'-i2il',t 


LKK'EHTKICHIIIItE 

Mil. HALS I INt. Ill'l'l II 
St |lf ll)|, 

Hite ninlll ml Vi'l l Inr mtuil 
mulm' riiniitinn Ini Mililei ia 
Nirtle |. Mill 1(0 132222 


LEICESTERSHIRE 

1mm 

LEICESTERSHIRE j 

1 1 • 

REAUMONT LEYS '' 1 
SCHOOL ' " 

J n * ,n BdvartiatiMH 

aiaj'CTBKi 11 s mai 

SHEFFIELD 

neat* C.roacent, 811 BRT- ■■ 
RffSUPlred for Saplnnbtr, 
1982 a teacher of Econonln 
ami llutary. Beale 1. >TT 
Aupllratlun (arms itf 
furtlier detail* are atiilii 
fi-um the Head Teacher to 
whom they should hi h> 
turned within two wetk* 2 
llir (ipnnnrgncD or this edwr- 
tlxcnii'iit. 1386311 132218 

SHEFFIELD 

CITY OF SHEFFIELD 
rilllt: ATION DEPARTMENT 
AN1ILEICII SCHOOL 
f ili'ailfitxtt Road, BhaHleld, 
912 2(JB 

llruillrcd for . SaplwnMf; 
1B82. a leuchor of Eccmornm 


iiruiiircii iqr . sspimimt; 
1982. a leuchor at EcoHola 
Gnutiruuliy arm* l. The aHni) 
to naalHl In the feachlu a 
rinme* or Music would m I 
will'd inr. nddlllun to *>)U 
■tuv rniMlidiitti has to offuni 
I* imt exMillllal. 

Aunlli nl Inn forma Id 

I nr t in- r details uro tviljibla 
I rum the Heudleachar « 
wliuni limy Hjiould be n-. 

till Ill'll within 2 WIIBk* OllB 

npin-ariini t' _Uf tills' pdMrluj;, 
in l'iit . (38314) ■ 13>»p 

SHEFFIELD 

hiih . ... - 


nfihe l.nitn, h he H l*> Id. 91 'l 

lli-uiilri-il ror 
I1IN2. n tmtcluir of EroBo.«l“ 
— Si all' I- , j.j 

Aiinllration . fiirin* ' W 
nu ilii-i tl.u ni Is arn nvaiaig 
front Oil- lliiutl ;T«#W JnJ' 
wiiniii ihnv ’ aliouW. nji n 
ini-iiml wltlili* a,wnrki_ oturt 
aluM iiriMli i' ul fill* 
lili'iit. 1 38,6091 


■mil n rl Biiliinrl. h 

llu- llmiilti'nihiu- 


■" Alf iipnl li-niiht 
utile ljini-11 11 L. 'in I* 

»« l ftrT:ar , ss^a 

VT.rTffl5,."f»L n *frriB 


I a mil Irani 6 
ijlOl- 11 IN. 
n-ll'a vlpw II 


SOUTH GLAMORGAN COUNTY COUNCIL 



I- 


Opportunities with Nottrnghainsftire 

Unless otherwise stated the followinn ^ 1 - - 

Application (orms/further details are^ Svahbllfrom^S tor ,he Au lumn Term 1982 
stamped addressed envelope. aDIB ™m the Head Teacher cf tho V.'i,l.li 1 

Closing date: 4th June, 1982, unless otherwise Indicated h conoerned 00 r «oelpt of a 


SECONDARY 

Seale 4 - Head of English 

West Brfdgford Comprehensive School. Louahhnrm.nh o 

WbsI Brldglord, Nollmgham NQ2 7FA ® borough Road, 

HeadmMlar: 0. A. Marden. B.Sc. Mixed: 1280 ftl-iai 
For September, teacher as Head of English Succeaof d non^i 
date will organise the leaching of English and 
out the school and teach English to all years IncteSnn rS 1 

sa * ,evo1 “ ursM - ln, ™ ,s h ssfiss*-® 

Further details available (a.a.e.) from (he school 
Plsaae apply by letter giving full curriculum vitae and ih« 
names and addresses of two referees, to the HeadmSter al 
the school, as soon as possible. a3ier at 


8cale 3 - Heed of Chemlsti 
Medsn School, Bums Lane. ' 
OQN 


w W eaiw w MVWW Wl Wl 191 IIIOII V 

Meden School, Bums Lane, Warsop, Mansfield, Notts. NG20 


Headmaster: J. B. Ellis Mixed: 13S0 (11-1B1 

For September, teacher as Head of Chem slry. CandldaUm 

JJjjJJ’ava taught Chemistry successfully up low S3 

A^cattons by letter, direct lo the Headmaster as soon as 
ppMible, giving the names, addresses and telephone numbara. 
of Iwo referees. Interviews are to take place on 2Bth May, 

8cals 3 - Head of Technical Studies 

*3* toit/noH NQ8 P Kz"’" V0 Sch ° 01, Be0C,,dale Road ' 
Headmaster: A. Murphy, B.A. Mixed: 720 (11-18) 

For September, experienced teacher as Head of Technical 

H^rt^oIt' B a?hi C k 08aft i! candfda,e w iii organise this Important 
ombraces Design Technology, Technical 
Drmrfng, Wood and Metalwork currently to '0' level. Candi- 
dates must be experienced In Metalwork Catholic preferred. 
Scale 2 - Economics 

NoWngham *NG8 4DQ C0 " e9e ■ allbOr0Uflf ' Ho>d - B " b0 ™S h ' 
u Q ‘ Mart J n - B - Sc - a -D- Mixed: 000 (16-18) 
8 ra ^ ua,e teacher of Economics to teach In 

te^fng riV esSeS£l? rtm0nl SuCC8S8fU ' 0Xpertenc9 oi <A ' 

1 Jeate 2 - French 

Schdo1 - Cwllon Road - 

S?^25lik!: N ‘ C ^9i D ; LC - N.D.D. Mixed: 1030 (11-16) 

• * and k enlhufila8tic teacher of 

avmhja iu e no « 2 teacher departmenl, which wilj 
ffiKffi r -5?S? h a ,0 u? ll i , 9 08 , flnd 0bll| ltes. S.P.A. payable. 

- Noi5 h rm M20®1 y lalophonlnfl ■* Hsadmaster on 

; Jmrnediafeiy^ by l6l,0r ,0 U, ° Headma8te r at the school 
1 Closing dale: 20th May, 1902. 

8SJ S r J 7 Computer Studies 

usoiing sonool, Wollalon Avenue, Gedling, Notllngham NQ4 

‘ApfiSSuS* Ss?*! B A - M,xod: 1050 111-18) 

'£h to C fi?’ ( teMhor of Computer Studies to 

Aflna I., ,a,B " v and A levol. 

iuftable w&l?* 1 H8ad ° f 0opa,lm ® nl 18 QvaJ,a bia to 
;fesdtaSly ,y by l0ll8r ' 10 lfle Hoadmo8ter at tea achool 

Lane, New Oltorton, 

ulSl™' Notts. NQ22.8TD 

R - , W - Sowden. B.So. Mlxad: 1203 (11-10) 
teacher of German, lo ’A’ level standard with • 
r ®Qufred. Scale 2 post available for suitably 
~n3^ii C k™' dat0 ' but appllcantB seeking a Scale 1 appoint* 
*PlS!Lr^L££ c 9 na l d0red ‘ 5.P.A. payable. 
hSnM SSrLJP teller, giving full curriculum vitae and lbs 
addre &808 ol two roFereea, to tbe Headmaster at 
. • 8crwo L aa soon as posalbfa. 

’ SSbfurf ™* !®te|ogy 

'SaSSSh £°!UP r ® ha ns*ve Sohool, Sloneyford Road, Sutton- 
f^A%F N TO ham8 blre NG17 20U 
ffir&SSSL 7, .° amW0 ' M.A., J.P. Mixed: 1300 (11-18) 

- teacher of Biology to teach to C.S.t. levs! but 
■■•■mtiBE&A ** lh torm wo*' ^ Interest to Health 

be an advanlage. 

tetter to the fteadmaster, together wllh the; 


w5°i^X, /Q * nartl Solence 

po^whenalve School, Chapel Road, Sol- 
i .'SVLShflham NG10 6BW 

l/WCmBirof' D ll ' M^„ n r«_ ■ a nj I iiln >4 4 1 at 


SISft Drive, Hucknall, No,- 

Headmaster, E. J. Round, B.8c., M.Phll., M.I.BIol. Mixed: 1880 

3^ "SWLEteSftfi, sss 

Hsadmaster a, tt&ftEZSSSff"*' 10 lhe 

Hoad. Clifton, 

Headmaster: M. D. Clark. M.A Mho* tonn m iai 
Scale 1 - English 

NG3 8 2NR ld8 SlXth F0mi Co,tefl01 Car,,on Roa d, Nottingham 
Principal: K. 6. Buxton, B.A, Mixed: 605 (18-lfll 

levels. Experience teacher preferred, though not essential ' 
Scale 1 - English 

aWS.S'S* 8,;,,00l ' Adhur M “ Hoad. 

teteii j -i8) sho,t ' Ba °" dpa “ x,d: 900 o'-™. 

For September, graduate teacher of English, to kiln orowina 

SJff depa ^"’ 1 ' to offerS™: XiQ 

Beale 1 - English 

BjBj ®j P 6 r 0PX 8lV9 8ch001, H " ,CrMt Driv0 ' HxknaK ‘ Not- 
Hsadmater: E. J. Round, B.So„ M.Phll., M.I.BIol. Mixed: 1880 

For September, graduate teacher of English. A willingness td 

Please apply by letter, giving full curriculum vitae end the 
names and addresses of two referees, to the Headmaster at 
me sohool, as soon as possible. 

Scale 1 - French 

■ ShS &ffi"""' ^ G8dlhfl H«d, Arnold, ; 
Hepd^ster: W- C. Evans, B.Se„ F.R.a8„ J.P. Mhed: 1728 

. September, graduate teacher ;0l French to teach through- 
out the school, and to share In the teaching of a w Ida range of 
examination, courses. 

Scale 1 - French 

Grove Comprehensive School, London Road, New Balderton 

Newark, Notts, NG24 SAL 

Hsadmaster: C. N. Bates, B,A; Mixed: 1160 (ii-is) 

For September, wall qualified teacher of French for established 
department. School has flourishing exchange Jink and excellent 
facilities, Including language laboratory. 

8e«te 1 - Geography • 

Bhiecoat C.E. (Aided) School, Aspley Lane, Nottingham NG8 
BGY 

Headmaster: R,.F, B. Smith. M.A. Mixed: 723 (11-16) 

For September, teacher of Geography to C.8.E. end *0' level 
along with about one quarter time-table of European StudleB. - 
Pleasa slate axtra-curnoular interests. , 

Ptease apply by latter giving, fell curriculum vitae: and the. 
names and addresses oftwo referees, to tha Headmaster and 
the school as soon as possible. 

Hariland Comprfhens^a School, Sparkan HID, Worksop, Notts. 

S80 ian • : ■ ■ • 

Headmaster; C. Hardy, BA, M.Ed„ F,R,Q.S. Mixed; 13l0 

Si ^September, teaolier. of Geography oan also, offer, 
History andtor Gommurilty Studies: A' concern tor less able 
' pupils and an interest )n extra curricular activities an ad van- : 


School, Sparkan Hill, Worksop, Notts. 


wge. . 

Scale 1 - Girlie' Phyatoat Education 

ABhfisId ComprahensIvB' School, .Sutton Road, KJrkby-ln*. 

AshflekJ, Nottingham NQ17 8HP • • . ■ 

Haadraeter: R: GlUstii MA, M.Ed. Mixed: 1060 (11-18) . 


^wSri?!2S^ n ,hB Lower 6<Jibol an a 
..“i“-Wtable for suitable candidate. 


lame department with excellent .outdoor and Moor facilities. 
Phrase apply by letter (enotoalng s.a-e.) gMng fell cyrriculum 
yftaeandtne ngmea of two teferaes, to the Headmaster at the 
school. as ebon as possWe. . .. ^ 

oSlrydate SSrSSIK 1 &hdol) Sloneyford Road,:SuHon- 
Jn-AshflJd, Notte. NG17 2DU ' J ' " 

Headmaster: T. Gambfe, .MA, J.P. Mixed! 1300 {11 18) 
pSiptOTWr. tsaqhsr of Hdme Econontics to.be Involved In 


mSM aar Department bui w,,h ^ * 
S5t-^r toselhw ^ ,h “ ,B 

Closing date: 2nd June, 1982. 

^M'"^(1M8) BaX 

J. co P om,ea «!hrid Care 

NG83GP® h °° ' Qtenbrook Crescent, Bllbarough. Nottlnflham 
^ QriHtth s Mixed: 700 (1 1-18) 

& Hconomlcs/Child 

!«*»« 1 - Humanftlea 

ft. a:,,00l ■ Ra ™° m Drt ™- 

m ^ candidate 


- am stiM 

. 8oaIe 1 - Mathematics 

steMsrtff 1 " soho °'' Edwania ^ 

Hea dmistress : Mrs P. 8. Wetia Mixed: 1030 (11-181 

w a £. hBr of MaBl0m atics to C.8.E. and 'O’ level 

necMsaiy^ 01 h aoh °° oHer a SBt »nri aubfect if 
Scale 1 - Mathematics 

^ m Wn 8 & 8 Sr6% &h001 ' N ™ dl " ala ® rea , Klmbar- 
Hea*naslen D. T. Dowell, MA Mixed: 1300 (11-18) 

Si ^ Si!3S?, r L, toaof ?L 01 MsUrcmaifcB to teach amisa the 
age and ability, range. The school haa a developing sixth form. 

Spate 1 - Ms them tiles 

isnuss s°aWvv siv8 c "’** "■* a* 

assist assess 'wsa 

'Sctle 1 - Maths in sties 

NQia Jn 3AF ,dfla Mm ° Sch0 ° r ' Roadl Notts. 

Mfxed: 428 (P-1 3} 

For September, teacher of Mathematics, with interest - in 
teffhriflM through the 9-13 age range" 
iVS? 0688 ^ car ^ da ^ w,]| bo respor stole for a M.war 
tuition group and win be In a depeliment or three ^ 

■ S*? 1 * 1 - Mathematlcs/Sctenoe ■ 

r&^ffiN02;iSF Mans * 9id Road - Edwi "> iow «' 

with mixed ability teachlnp and aUHty to feecfi^ScSnceaSS 
Computing, as wall as Mathematics, an advantage. 

Beal* 1 - Nathematlca/ficlence 

uSS, BWMP* stuart Ave ™ 6 - Fm * ^ 


8cate 1 - Phyalca/Chemletry 
Garibaldi Comprehensive Sohool. 
Town, Mansfield, Notts. NG19 OJX 


Garibaldi Road. Forest 


^^“tefi D. K. Mofntoeh, M.S 6 . Mixed: 980 ( 11 - 18 ) 

For 8epjarftber. for 6nq year only, graduate teacher of Physics 


and/or Chemlairy. " • “ ' — OTV,W1 w 

Scale 1 - Science 

sxu anunsnrn ^ ** pavament 8u,ton ‘ 

Headmaster: T. King. BA Mixed: 1200 (11-18) 

For Seplembsr, teacher lor Science, must have expertise In 
Chemjsliy. TNs fs purpoae-bimt Community School wtth 
excepUpnal fadfltles offering unusual opportunities tor teachers 
committed, to modem methods and Community Education.' 

8^*1* 1 7 8 poW Studies, History and Geography '* 

The Brunts School, Woodhouae Road, MaiwnarNotts, NG10I ; 

Headmaster: M. A. Carter, MA Mixed; 786 (13-18) ' 

Rjr September, teacher to teaph Soqlal StodU, History and' : 
Geography to. Q.8.EJ , 0\ level. • . ’ 3 , 












BKC. ECONOMICS 

continued 


SURREY 


IIKIITKOKUHlIlltK 


imADKonn 


WILTSHIRE 


MALMESBUWV SCHOOL 
11 - IB Cmrlprt'hPnNlVP > 

HendinHittiii'! Mr. J.A. n’An-> 
Required For Hvpli'nibnr, 
I9R3. o tearhor tu lake K<o- 
namlci to 'A' L.nvol end mnIhI 
with Humanities tnac!i1*\<> In 
the Lnwor School. Ecoiiomltfl 
is e new Rultjert In thin well 
estnbl Ishail tlxlh form and the 
teacher appoin i ad wl 1 1 have 
considerable scope tu dove lop 
the coarse and contribute to 
General Studios mill Social 
Education Coarsen. 

Application Hiving the 
names of two rsfrret* to Thu 
Headmaster. Mn linos bury 


r.mifATION COMMIT 111. 
KF.N YNISTON MANIIB 
lliifi uwuiiil Aviiimr. himi'iin 
mi Timm i’ll 

< | U . | b Mhml (.mini* 


lit All OF I: NCJ I.IH II. Smlr A 
or 4. reiinlreil .Sept. I SB-!. 
Iiiteri'iit In rfrtiiiin mid tnuslml 
iii'iMlucIliMin ... w«;Ii iinii'd 
t.'uui-Hcfl to Chi. iiiul O level. 


Auni* In first m (it nimt by 
letter Hi Ili-nil ulslng iminr* A 
nililrpu"t uf two reiernes 

< jus i 7 1 isimim 


School. Malmrnbury, Wilts ns 
noun ns puselUlo. piimse send 


Scale 2 Posts and above 


a S.A.E. for further rietnlln. 
f333B.1i ISHVllia 


KAHNKT 


niii i i«i'iii:itu'K tiint him 
N l'IIOOI. 

Ili'rns I .mu 1 . Wi-iwvii « : .i i 
t.'ltv. 

A llninl III I : mil I Nil |m ■ mm pril 

tur .ii'iitrmiiri l»»il in nil* 
lulu'll •ill-ialitllt v *■ lnn»l >il 
I in'll iiuiiih iinu in iiif si«tia 
Kurin l. 

,M urn sent thin In ,t Si.ilr 4 
ii l<piiliiliiii’iit mill tli<- liiir-ntlim 
la lllnt llio in-rmiil >lni nl 

will urunrens tu ht n|r 4 
However, nt llu- lime uf 
advnrtlBlno the iipimliiliii-iit 
has to be rentrlrtcil tu hciile 
A. 

An Internal In Mdli Furin 
General St mile* I purl It liliirl V 
In I'elatlmi tu Oslirliluo rnnrfl- 
iIiiimi wiui lil he pnrlli'idnrl) 
welrunmal. 

ApplIciillitiiN (nti fni-nisi nee 
rntliilrml wltliln 7 iIuvn atf (lie 
iiltiieiirunrn u| (hi* iulv«-rti*r- 
iiiftlt . I'u rlli it ilr till In rim In- 
itli I nlnetl fruiii the llenilmnnier 
ul the trluxil (MAI pleanel ur 


cilY iii nit -\ii' min 
Ml I It DIM II MAN llll'M II 
WVK1. MANUK I ■ 1*1. 1C 

Sl'llnul 

Ki'ilil ll'nl (ill Si plniilirr I 'III.', 
it riill-tlinr iM'iiiiniii'ill lemliri 
uf I'.iml Inti i Si nle |1 \|i|ill • 
inmn nliiuilil lie i iiiiiinli Ini in 
trnelllilil the tv lint e nlillllt 
rillllli- till In nnil ini I mile. i ( *■! 
•■nil '(■' level iiri>iip«. llm 
nclitiul Is lie il« Inn t»u i niull- 

ilnlen with mi Iniitalliut It r I 

punitive nppreni ■> t>> tern liiit-i 
tile mili.lert unit ttltli expert' 

eilip/lillernnl In Dmillil. 

Appllcatliiu fm ms inn\ be 

olitnlneil f rum llie In 

Prrnuiinel llirhii, .llli Ilnur. 
Pruvlnt Ini limine, Mnrlirl 
Street, llrmlfm il. fill I INI' 
nnd slit hi 1 il he reiurneii (■> me 
lleadteili'ller. Wtke Mnnur 
Si'liiiul. Wllnim HiiiiiI. IVikn, 
flrnilfiii'il. nn 1‘4 'IPX lit 7 III 
June I 'lll-J. Itrleirllae I I 

a 4 a h a/ r r.ft . i a ■ i a ft j i i .vj 4 a j 


1 IMKS KIHU'ATIIIMAI. HUWUM Pn ^ 

mUKlNCitlAMHIUKK UOUBET * — - 


'III MIN KIVNI*. IIIVISHIN 

■ It’S] |l \| 1 V| ||| || || 

J Ilf tu eve. Net! |III| I I'lliiiirll 


Mk I f. nil l 

ill'ltr.l • uilipi elieunit r ■ 
•t|i|>r>.«|i n nteiv 1410 ■ mill 

l' 11 'Tplr Hiliei , 
1 ■I'- . i»" I. nullah lesilipi, 

M. nle I I*, ten. It up n, nml 
tm liullllii A Intel. 

f he at I I |a alttinirtl n n ,t 

llltial nl 1 1 m lit r alt e liiat util . 
vide llie lint , ll\ ,i| Mllliiu 


Ketr lira 
Aaa|N 


Ann|n»,iii, p with iriiHttnl r « - 

peilara nml rented I |a 

Ainllnlilp tn nppruteil rntn 
nihl there |a n «lilf ratline uf 
lieiiainii |.i In r v In the area 
Aniilli attain form* nml 
I lit* line detail la ntnllailile fruin 
tlir llenal. M title It A. on 


'fid! fiWi 

»r,;,|rre^^»OMU 

S ib-kSM 

uerrmuient put- <tS!S t 
, Aiipliiation * 

farther detail! froS^il 1 „ tad 

OOUSET ‘ 


rr< rlpl ul ai fua>le>'ii|i atniuiieal 
nalilreaaetl entelnpe. 1 , 1 ft Ufkrf I 


WINTON noYH' Scunni 
Miruiwtlun Avonur H0Q l* 


'■•‘tulWMO! Avonun 

D , \ U 7* tn,uul " 1 BKB'lTP 

i.'J ■ ‘a* ««0 an rn 


English 


I.UNHUN Htmm'r.H <11- 
DAIINF.T 

cui'TiMU. sciiom. 


lay lilmii lilll We I ivy n I aaraleil 
a A An? air tevenlinia) Wi'lwvn 
Giii'den a 4 ft. 'll. ift'lli.Wi 


l*ll nn street. Mill Hill. NW7. 
Tnl: 01-0.10 I <IA 7 . 


: \ 


Heads of Department 


Cninpronnnialvr . Hull 1031 


W tJi». Sixth lurin 1.13. 

nqnlreil Bepiemher 1982, 
graduate teai her uf ENGLISH 


HUMHEltttlDK 


CUMBRIA 


IP share tn work uf lnrne. 
llvoly department. EnoUsli 
trlassa* are uf niltntl nullity In 


E-: 11 1 IC AT ION DP.PAItTMKN I 
EAST nillING III VISION 
ENGLISH TEACHER SCALE U 
HEADLANDS SCHOOL 


1 .I' '•< : 




COUNTY COUNCIL 
TRINITY SCHOOL 
Strand Road. Car Hate. 

(1700 on Roll, mixed 
voluntary controlled 
comprehensive. 11 - IH yi-n. i 
Requlrod fur September. 
I0B2 hr January 1983. a well 
qualified und evper lanced 
teacher tu be IIEAU Ol* EN- 
GLISH DEPARTMENT brain 
4. Department contains 
(ipprnxlmatuly 13 full lime 
equivalent ntaff. English Is 
tauglii up to * A ’ level and 
Grams to 'O’/CSE level. 

Application forms anal 
further details from ilia Head, 
completed forma with letter 
of application to be returned 
by 7th June, 1082. (493B3I 

1324 13 


Vanrit One nml Two. tHeu 
netted. An Interest In library 
work would be an advantage 


Rewerby ituad. Drlilllnutun. 
VOI5 ft (I |t 


and a Scale 2 post may be 
available fur a suitably 


tCu-oiluratltinal 
compreliniisivo 1 1 
N.O.Il. 14091 


nsperlrnve rnnaltdiito. 

In aiiproVBil caixes 
nanlnluiiio ainiv bn ulvmi 
luwnrdN llie pavinnnt of 
rniiiovnl cx-penaen and 
separation allnwnnriis. 

Apiily in writing t«i Iteiid 
Tnncher with full r.v. nnd 


Iinguired fur Heptatuber. 
1982. to be raeponnltiie fur 


minion of two roforonn. 

H.A.E. (30433) 132420 


» ua raspuiiniiiiD lur 

the development of the siili- 
lor t In the |i<vv<*r nihiuil 
i ven rn I - 3 •. 

Aitplitiif lun fiu-iiiN anil 
fur liter ftotulK nt-<> nvniliiiilr 
fruiii tlie llenil of llm Ni IioiiI 
(H.A.E. pi nn uni. In wiitiin 
a-uniplotod forms shniilil be ri>. 
luriioif* lay 28tii May, IflR'i. 
I3U0 I Al 132420 


ESSEX 


SUTTON 


KENT 


KINO HAItOLI) SCHOOL 
moll 1 .2381 
Uroometlekhall Raatl, 
Walthnm Abboy- 
Tel: Lea Valley 714800/ 
714818. 

ENGLISH- SCALE 3 Land 


LONDON ItOHOUGII OF 
SUTTON 

EDUCATION department 
NONSUCH HIGH SCHOOL 
FOU GIRLS 


COUNTY COUNCIL 
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
OHAVeSHAM DIVISION 
NORTH FLEET SCHOOL FOR 


ENGLISH- SCALE 3 London 
Fringe Allowance Payable. 


Ewall Rond. Clteom, Surrey 
BM3 BAD 

Telephone: 01-394 13-8 
ENOLIBU. SCALE 2 
Required Septentbar 1982. 
aaod honours graduate with 
relevant experience to share 
in the teaching or English 
throughout Hus selective 
school, to ‘O', *A* end Uni- 
versity Scholarship Invola. 

An interest In dramu would 
be welcome. (33614) 132420 


BOYS 

gorier Road, Narthflaet. 

Blit - form Com prhe naive 
School 

A Heed of English Deport- 
ment, Scale 4, Is required ta 


mint, Scale 4, Is required to 
ho responsible for the 
coaching of English longuaue 


and lltareturu to C.8.B. and 
’O* level. Thje la a key prist 
which demands a person with 
excellent leadership qualities 
to continue and develop the 


September. Sncond In Depart- 
ment (Scale 3) to taka a ma- 
jor shore in the leadership 
and oroanleetlun or a large 
department committed ta 
mined ability teaching. 
STEWARDS SCHOOL 
^arnall Road. Harlow, CM1R 

Tel! Harlow 21931. 

ENGLISH /ORAM A Hcelo 2. 
Required September, enthu- 
siastic and committed Teacher 
tu tuke responsibility for Dra- 
ma. Stewards la e thriving 


Scale 1 Posts 


arid successful school with a 
strong music end ilrtmo tradi- 
tion. 

For both poets curriculum 
vitae and names of two re- 
ferees to Kaadteucher con- 




teaching which exist In the 
achaol. 

The srhool is situated near 
the Mfl for easy access. 

Applications are Invited 
from suitably experienced 
teachers tnoeinar with curri- 
culum vltno and naming two 


•' • ' i . I 

I *’ • 

l. \ 


AVON 


earned ffqalscnp i.i.i, 
plaeee). 13347 0) 13B4B0 


COUNTY OP AVON 
WlTlIYWOOU SCHOOL 
Molesworth Drive, nrlatol. 
B8 I 3 SDL. 


08 1 3 0DL 

(1 . 130 boys and 

Required for 


culum vltno and_ naml 


rofereoa to Ilia Heatlmaacor at 
the Sc haul. BWALK DIVISION 
THE 8HEPPBY SCHOOL 
Headmaster: R-O. Bnrson. 

Fiilly rompralianelvn mlxod 


Required for Jm atember a 
teacher or enolibh to 
O.C.E. and ‘O’ levels fScailn 
1), The Depertmenl Is well- 


Fully romprahanelvn mlxod 
upper xchool T3 - 18 years. 

J^aVoW^lwh scale 

nrailuetn . 


ENFIELD 

LONDON nailOUOIl OF 


resourced end la concerned In 
a wide range of activities. An 

y itoruat in organising thu 
unlor Library would be 


An oxpnrlonreil 


N.wM,^ c r r ‘ 

Oi > miirahe m al vo 

EaiWJfia ifFirartiii 


ntlvolllunauiis. 

Pleasu nPPly to IlCUdmastnr 
□Ivina curriculum vitae, in* 


ilka 




□Ivlnn curriculum vitst?. in* 


Itnqii'll- 

trerhne 


smlnatlons. 
. Further t 


xtfior deihlla will ho nun- 


mm 


BEDFORDSHIRE 

NCmTHBltH AMA. 


ace £408. 

Applies clem forma tfonlscnp 

b a.e.i ublelnab.ln from, tlie 
eadinaatar at Iho school, -lu 

VK.TNM'* " ,,an u *if«&‘6 


tlddenham Ti 


niduenliain T 

If, Mo 




uinprelieuslve. No. on 


roil 700 

Required for floptanther 1 
a Teacher of Eiiollih. Bi a 
An . nbln and enlhunl 


' Metropolitan Borough of Stockport 


mm. 




PHYSICS 

• SculoKRef. 1860) ■ . , 

: Broadway School. High Grove Rosd> Chcmllo. 

:• Stockport SK81NP 

An Ability to teadi Mathomnltcfl in the Lower School would bo 
tlcBlrablo. ■ 


An , nbln nnd enlhuelextir 
tiiucnor la raqiilriid lb i.aiilrt* 
but a to tins contlnulna de- 
velopment of Hie subject. 

AppIuiHilon _ forma . and 
further tlntnlls fi tuit the llrntl* 
master, n.a.o. nleaaa. I'lnnm 

w- 


BEDFORDSHIRE 



SECOND IN ENGLISH 
DEPARTMENT 

Scalo8(Ro/. 1000) 

• gfl-advertiMmoHt ■ . 

BOSStm^ Road, Bramhall. 


Stockport 8K7aiT. 

' An oxDorlenccd tewhor is required to be second- in-diargo of e 
. , iiu-ro RngUah Faculty, llie auccoBBtbl applicant will havo 
. taught m&od ability groupa, 16+ EngUah and a variety of 6th ' 

'• Form i cotirflM, Ha/aho will bo able to contribute actively to the 
thinking, co-ordination and practice of English work r 
throughout the school. Tn particular ho/ahe will be expooted to - 
make a significant contribution to curriculum development in 
years 4 and 6 and will bo capable of assuming a auostantinl 


furthai 

muatar 


re profurably 
t.C. teachers. 

R rormg and 

w thn Jleiid- 
laan, Fleain 


lat June, 


thinking, co-ordination and 
throughout the school. In partU 
make a significant contribution 
years 4 and 6 and will bq eapi 
share of the reaponaiblUty 
etandardisHticm of examination 
Graduate preferred- ; 


. BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 


ible of assuming a substantial 
for tlie admlnlstratlo* and 
work. 



ENGLISH 

l Scale l>SPA(Ref. 1874) 


Brinnhi|^on School, Lapwing Lane. Brinhingtdli, Stockport 

- Ihoi^ l^.'pm^red to teach acrqe^ l^ : 8#.aml ability tartg? ; '- 
FM v-: -mb. W;Wu4ng toj.hWie fconrn^tmejt : to 1 the fseKooTe : ' : 


nt aftacWnroUhlty, 


T .; gie^l^idT^H^haehool, W<>^8l«ne, K Gheadl e ftuIm^ 

: ■; W be sbccmdlit thodepartraerit.andnm abletomake a 



t'Al.liKItllM.K 


BRAUFOK1) 

CITY t»l- IIRAOFORII 


MCI ROI'OI.ITAN (TIIINf II. 
IIINtiLFY GRAMMAR 
SCHOOL. 

Vuhiiuary Aldral — I'iiimiiIpiI 

Hoqulrrd (or brptnmlaf-r. 
1083. at this mlat-tl C.iantutr- 
hnnalyn 13-10 Ni-limil uf (I.Vi 
iiiiulle with 2 IO m Hu- *i|»th 
I ■•I-III. at Sa al Ip 1 Iiuii llnr uf 
r.ll||Hah. (la trail la mill. all, nl 
all Invnln lap Hi mart Ina liiallnu 

t»t'V. ■(»■ I livid . 

Ail liitermt hi ■Irnum. nut- 
ilainr iiurniiltx. iininn* ur •iili**r 
nxtro rurrlrulair itrilvilirn 
wnulil Ian Wiilriiinr. 

Aiiulli-ntlnn forma aiiul 
further (Intiilla may hr 
obtained fa.a.n. iilnniui) fruin 
the Ho ad mast nr. Binnlry 


Ml.TRlll’ltl.lr AN limtlllll.il 
I ‘(ll’Ni II 

I DIM A I'll IN III 1'Altl'MI.Nr 
Mil Hill MiKMtANK M lllllll. 
Vlituvtn It. t nit . | Until! . W rut 
Yiirkililar ll\*k tlljfi 

II minimal f rami Aiiiiuai I OH 2. 
n Innalirr a.f INI.M-.il (hi nlr 
I I lur thl* itt-il .r«lalill*llrd It 
- IM mitral t ifiti>i|-n|inil«lv<i 
Salima]. ilarrr will lie nu 
■ ■lipiirllMilli fair llir nan a ranful 
a niolliliftr la, iri«, h roiirir* 
IlirnuulaiKii llir Ai linol lfi«-|ini . 


UnnJlrifd Vor" 0 « n r ?"l 

. uS?: Llo B S^ l - l £ 

ht ii,i | ra non«Mrti.nt* t,a ^ 
Aimliratiun r an _. 
ftirlfinr Ur (alls avVlUlfi. 

tlm llnudinndar at 

Oil rrrnli .1 of g .VV 

— [him 

ENFIELD 


ina t im fii Ii i iirm . 
I. i-Urt* of nuul 


cirommnr Hihool, Kohihlrv 
Road, Blnnloy. West York- 
■hire. BDllS 2KH iTnl; lirad- 


ford 362357) to whom thn 


aliauld . be rnturned by 7lh 
June. 1983. Rof . ET 32002/ 
TES. (30263) 132422 


I. rllrt* of npiill, allnii In 
llm Hr ntlir m hrr a* anon n* 
liiiaallilp ill* (iiu foil > urr l> ulti ill 
« llnr nml tiaiiif* nml aililrr*. 
nr* nf two refrrrrn. 

IIDI.Y riHNIlV Cl- I A I 
SrNllili M III )i)l . 

Ilaiblawiar I Ii lti, ml. Il'ilinflr III 
Hnllfn* II.HU 'll'l. 

It mu Ilf al (mill A il il il *( 1 IIH'4 

for (Ilia 4 form rnlrv Cainiurr- 
tiniiMVf ka hii, il at 'I rata lirr <if 
I'.NGI.ISII IMi'nlf 1 I 111 ■llurr 
III (hr tnarltlihl of Fllllllah 
na raoia (hr uur mill nhlllty 
rat nun. 

Anplliiidiaii furnia and 
(urtltor iimalU iiiitnUuiliU (uu 
rsrnliti or fiiailerup n.n.n.i 
front tlir Hr ailniiatrm* (u 
whom ruinplfirtl furtna alioulil 
hr retiiritrai by 4(lt June 
I'lHa. 13892ft) 132422 


rSWtVli noROU °H op ■ 

Vulamiurt Allied 

I. omprehenaiva School l«r ‘ 

nua? bV. in 

alaiiuips. Scale l. y 01 
l.uiidun Allowance. 


l.iuidon Allowance. 

Apply by letter, with etac 

nf two rMtrtn and full nm. 
> uluni vilao dlract to tha ai- 
vnroml 11 eodntaater. ((Syi 


EBBEX 

MDULBHAM HIGH SCHOOL 


Drlan Cloaa, Chelmsford 
Tel: Clielamford AOIOI 
(Roll 16SU 

TEACHER OF ENOLIBH Bntt 
n«<nulred Bepiemher, Unit 


CAMnniDGEHHIIlE 


BRADFORD 

CITY OF BRADFORD 
METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 


NORTHERN AREA 
DEACON '.H UCIIOOI. 

(ll - 18 Ctimtirtifir tlalvr . 


itiiqlllred Bep _____ 

mid nnthuelaitlc 
Trocnor of Enolli 
and lllerature. 


DIRECTORATE OF 
EDUCATION KEItVICEh 
TONG UPPER HCIIOfH. 


Viilnntnry Cnnirulltuti 
(Jiiffli'a f inrilr iia. 


Application form) 
further details from 


TONG UPPER HCIIOfH. 
Rnuiiired lor HnPttunbrr. 
1982, a wall qualified Irorlirr 
of EnuHah. Hcala I tn Join a 


PrlrrhoriHMIli. PI. I 211 W 
Tel: Pnlrrbtirouilll 62 43 1 
lirad Mqilpr. Mr- M.W- 


English Lubuih 
ire. 

an torau and 
tails from HsiS- 
( foolscap ».«.(. 


lirad Maiaipr. 
Parkin. Ivt • A . 
(•llOlli' 10 
ItOl.l. 7 19 


vory aurt-oaafiil tlnparlmniil In 
(Ilia 13-18 mixed Comiirohrn- 


elve School with 1430 punlla 
on roll (Sixth Furm 1601. Wtl- 
IlngnoBS to aaalnt with Glrla 
Physical Education wnulil tin 
an advantage. 

Application forme and 
further details may be 
obtained la.a.e. pleeaa) from 


irlmniil In RFIJUIRFD I OR HI. PTl.Mlll’.It 
Hnilrohell- l'lB 2 :- Mlatrnan In tcarh low- 
130 pupil* rr and mlthlir nrlinoi llnnllnh. 
160). Wtl- up to '()■ Irvcl nnd sonic 


obtained la.a.e. pleeaa) from 
tho llaodmaatar, Tuitg Upper 

? lrhaoi. Went nelo Hill, Brad- 
ford. DD4 6NR lo whom corn- 
plated forma xhquid be re- 

132422 


up to '()' Irvel nnd sonic 
iilrH' uninrs - S, nle 1 |in*t. 

A well qiiallflcd iinrxan la 
Inokn il (nr who will lmll> to 
maintain the achonTx lonii 
tradttlun of hlnli ataiuiarda. 

Poaalblllty of aaalatanrc 
with Itaualnu In appropriate 


Loiters nr auplli Minn (mi 
formal n nrloalnw ciirrlrillinn 
vitae and the nsniei und 
nddreannn of two rrfnrrr* 
ahoiilii hr forwarilml ilireil to 
the llnatl ,Ms\lrr at thn ithaivr 
ualdrcaa lay lat .lull", I'INSI. 
I4U463I I 324 UJ 


UR AD FOR I) 

imehuired for Beptnmbar. 
1082. n flood liqiiuura gradu- 
ate oC Enolinh luv a iittmn- 
nont Benin 1 pint. Rof. ET. 


CHKHIIIRE 

Uhication iroMMir ri r. 


Th «P,“5y.*.S,S2w TO3'i!* w 


leather (foolscap s.a.«. 
■■Inasc). 

THE RICK9TONBB SCHOOL 
Conrad Rood. Wltham 
Teh Wltham 318736 
(Roll 820) 

TKACIIEn UF ENGLISH Bull 
I 

Required September'!) tkb 
uurpoia-bullt comprsnsnijii 
athnol which opened In 1111. 
MAYFLOWER SCHOOL 
H(ark Road, Blllorlcey, CM1I 

?olT BlUericay 3171/3 
(Jloll 16331 
English Bcois I 
Required firptembar. Iltslt 
Tearlier for Ihrivlnfl Endiil 
Department, with escsUHi 
fetllltina and Ibtqq «WU 
l urmi timetable cevers wholi 
ability range. ■ -. 

NICHOLAS SCHOOL 

H&i. w 

KiKiliv; I 3 

leather nreyaro(i to«fM*’ 

SRiesr'fls: 

nielli. .. 


B59 l Ha7T 

_ Itoj 


Rnquirnd In hniiletiilmr 
1982 Avnln 1 LNtil.IMt 
iTKMPciUAHYl for tin* 


Fur the «bow three poiu. 

iTri.,.ssir;8ilia','TOi 


loiiulrad for NotUamhur. 
for one year only, a 


I UB 2 , for u..~ r**i - 

nriohiain toarlmi- of Enaifmli 
IHcule 1) Rnf. ET. 334B2/TV.!t. 


vc|n|ilnn _ Ciimprnhniialvn 
Nrhiiol. 7fin no roll. 


Appllcnntn for each pus 
will he required to tench Hi 
aubjnet to nil .luvela of (lit 


J ahjnct to nil .luvela of this 
5-18. mlxod Com probe naive 
rhoul net un the ednft or llm 


Tho above dual t inn lx 
teittiHirnry null) 3 1 Aiiuuat 
1983 lit the flrxl hiainm e. 
The imaltlini will he re- 
vieweit for tteiilnmlirr 
I (IBS When ecu aiililary 
edurnttou in Wlltuxltiw la 
to lie i-euriinuiapil . 


Hrhool eel un the edge or the 
Yorkshire Da Inn with 

Hawurth ns pniT of lie iatcli- 


llawurlli na pni-l or He i atcl 
intuit area. The Ni luml Iiu a 
how Enullah eultn loiliidliiii 
library and Drmnt, Hall. 

The tunowlul vaitdldatt 


Aiinlunt lun forma anil 
inner iletalla avnllnlile 


Tlio tunoMlul vand Ida tea 
would he axpncted m lie In- 
volved In tlie pastoral work 
or tlm nohonl and liitpefiilly In 
Its out or sthmil autlvliiea 
programme. 

Anpm'attnn torina may tm 
obtained .fruin .the IlirerJoralC 


mtlll tlm flrndMiiiairr at 
tlie KthiHil nml alumni be 
returned lliere na aiiaqi an 


ret ii r ileal there na "oaolfla 
iMiaallile. l3ftU4R) 132422 


CORNWALL 


HAVEIUNG 
i.ondun .gonouuH of 
lillljVtSw HCIIO°L ( R «»" . 

rj.gr L«ne.Hiall.h«im RM>» 
JljLA. ALI.OWANCE <301/ 

XfplPhibor l OOa Jii h' n{ . 

rassi 7 “i sa 

< him see lend, WW B ,.(nlo|-' 


obtained Cru m - llie ItirrrtnrnlP 

i 'eramutnl Ofrtre, 4 ill ^I'lnrir, 
•rnvlnrini Yluuee, _ .Mni-kei 
Itrnei, urndford, UD) INI 1 . 

W id altpuid be rntiirnan (o'lfin 
eadteduhnr, OaRhank pratn- 


LltlU: ATIDN I llMMITTM. 
There la n I enmvai eapmnae* 


There la a I enmvai eaimnaea 
Ndlieme. 

Pdl.TAklt Ni-lltiOI. 
TrevNi-ihiitii Unad, hi AuMrll. 
(Juriiwall PI..2B (11/ 
til-nun Niii I J 
No on Roll i 1249 _ 


l Ii HIM ■ Tl 
tlntA coil 
a< man I 


15 "wSfcTw, 


PVoimTvoi.n " 

Nn un Roll i 1249 
linstlknai'lier' Mr. J. I-. 


GW8NT 

COUNTY COUNCIL 


'ejTenhivd School 


« ko FOR 1st January 
garlior.. ■ 

at I ana. orb invited 
from auniiriad teachore 


tK^olfowinp veoencipai- Well 
lUtllfM and eapspieitcgd 
eaoliar to bo anconU In the 
Separtment. Hoale 3 for anil- 
ib In candidate. 

AppilaaiJon . farms and 
urther informs tlpii where 
iv&llafato, obiatnebin from iho 
Director of Education, County 
Mi Cwmbran. Owent, NP44 


arb invited 
teachore . for 


ygoanclpai 

ad ex gar 


»o ancqnd ii 
Hoale 3 for 


ir». for 
1. WolJ 
eiaitcga 
in the 
>r euit- 


UdMiiiraa for ftautntnUer 1UH8 . 
u ii enillualaallii IfHilinr of l.n- 
ill I ati hi tblg 17 ■ In fompre- 
liniialve Hrhool wtinrn I rail l - 
t Iona I vnliiaa. nrn prised., Tills 
Post offers. tlm iiuiinriunltv to 
tnqch Enlilikh hi All leveta In n 
aurctiaaful weil-entilppud do- 
piir.incnl. 

. (.'loainn .dale for aiipllcn- 
llona will be two week* fol- 
lowing the Atm«aranq« uf this 
nil vert lemgent. 

Plcaeo ennly. by let tar ln- 
cludlnii. . tiiirrlruluin vltnB nml 
nttmna and ntldreanea of two 


'"V.euiire nf . mME 

ilmuld earrKulna 

advertlanniegt- (330 1 "uug , 


HAVKRING -.ouari oE ' 

TfiELUNnciN Boftouano 

^oluintary AlU>U- ** , 

&:sf 
feKii ^ 

S^oblf'lP 


’xsssR wM1 ' en,,i,,p, ’ u d '” klKvfif 


eluding. . mirrlculutn vltn« nml 
nnrnne and (ttldreaana, of two 

r nforeea tn • the 11 end teacher, 
ream whom further ilr tails 


ass.® fiTtf itomc;:- 


CORNWALL 


EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
There Is a removal expenses 

fj AL&OUTJI SCHOOL 

§5°^ ASili’iAdH 

ixth.Foriiii 9 


' HBRirFORbaWlRE 


QUNTY 


ivfAkliliP,'/ 




UNtiL 

\ ScHboL 


9 M Jass. itx 


Hqadfngcheri Mr. ».II. Trll 
aSbistant TEACHER OF 
ENOLlHH - SCALE 1 . 

Required _ In .- Srptembiir, 
tbaoher of Enqileh for clae 
on to ‘O' level, Ability 


HOUNSLOW 



*. rYWl l w awmdlft the dejigr^antvi end inuet b« abte'UimAke a 

:■ > eont^buU^n to strong. GGE ’A' Hvei couwee^which .are ,* 

/•airwdy w$U ektebMed. ; , ; . ••• •• •_ 

• < Gradual preferred: ' . 


2H 

ei Wlrtnbreh 


t MATHEMATICS i < . . r-\y 

.^'ScilelCBef- 1876) - 

^ ''-i ^ t y^ t f ‘ ^ 

- Adpllcation fbrirui .obteipable. li^ irui Vgtu majjle tp. 

. Headt^chet^ Quoting ^ ^ 


TIER OF 

- rf ^n««ha 
mut.m w 

: cp ntprehe nelva 

.teacher ipnilnr 1 
oinina a -euce 

MSrfta'ff RVvTdb re* 


teacher of English for clones 
on to ‘o' level. Ability .la 
teach clententary Geography/ 
Hietory an advontage. 

Please apply, by letter In- 
cluding Curriculum vllae and 


eluding Curriculum vitae s 
naniaa and addreseas of r 
rqrarees, ta (ho Headraast 
Viirwer cietblta/ ac«tnowledi 

tafJSTMWf iVi on 


[OUNHM/n F0 « ; 

hbntford scH ° 0 ( J “ ; tW j 


ra|’ course 


BERKSHIRE 

O' GAUNT SCHOOL ■ 
wlorJ. Berks. 

l^'mlxed uomprqltenalvfi) 

a. T) with rcapaiinTblllty 
irama required, end have 
• jxfoarunee or. mltea ability 

** APp'lPealJon form and furttw 







° 132420 






THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21 .5.82 


gBC ENOLIBH 

ainrinuad 

HOUNSLOW 

S l%^^d N ^h H ° 01 - 

piiO: Geoffrey J. Samuel. 

Boll' /(4o '(Including 6th Form 

tufted from Soptnmbor 
for this eight form entry 
•SrfV iqmprn itonei vo _ school 

£ iWuV:?" 

^fe^HER^KENGLIH., 

Mduatos. T,,n Eiillllali Do- 
s Stmcnt Which ml fcil dm a 
P .II itocked Library mid Ito- 

JEuSrcSp Cantrc with n fnl I - 

fnasLibrsrlen end Itnuoiirccn 
'ISausl. ha* eu nnUtualmitlt: 
Jpprtach «"d I* committed to 
uiah itsndards. There ore 
raurae* to 'O' level mid CHE 
-■t the end of tho Fifth year 
2nd » well established tradl- 
5So of 'A* and '5* lovol work 
In the Sixth Form. An opnur- 
■unity to contribute to .Sixth 
Farm 7 teaching would exist for 
m suitably qunllficd < andldatn. 
* LONDON ALLOWANCE. 

**LetturV of apnlirutinii dm 
forme) within 7 days lo Ihe 
Held glvina dninllN or nun!- 
iriooions and tlio iininra nml 
adiriint of two rofnrct-x. 
(31 774 > " 132422 


RTMENT 


BlDciwAV SCHOOL 

ISSthb ora'll afff Tunbrldac 

Mixid 11-18 

Required September. 1882. 
Esirgetit and imuqlnative 
(either for ENGLISH and 
DRAMA. Coursex lead to 
-Cj.E. Mode 3 In Drama and 
we have wldaxpraad rnpuie- 
uoa for drama production*, 
scale a available for teacher 
with (tillable experience but 
application from others wel- 
comed. 

Latter of application lo thn 
HMdmaatar with rurrlridum 
vltie and namca and utldrea- 
of two prof nnnlonal ra- 
(e reel. 1393881 132422 


COUNTY COUNCIL 
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
OHAVESHAM DIVISION 
GRAVESEND SCHOOL FOR 

Pelham Rood. Gravnannd 
Telephone (0474) 32806 


Telephone (0474) 32806 

UrlMrK&jnw!-iAaUiir 

maftmic } 

Mixed Staff Room 

SX^rX S M:. h a7„ ‘wl?,; 

sood Honours dnqran m r.n- 


fnur *° io r in ? 1 tt , fhuen| , '| l !i 

Sughourai^ac 

1 ‘J- 0 "" 011 .nimrrD nl ilo- 
¥*- °f ‘ho Firth year end 
Ad van cod Level 
Thin would 
“JJ JUiOfftallna iiuai mr ii 
Mabjiualiriad tanrlinr. 

^ng-bi'rric'ille'rn and 

[JJHh.hvo rnfarnnN. 

Ken" * BUaot. Chatham. 

M*r a 4| 1l,,d# ,b,,,t V ,, *>8 080 

for iu V ii«k,_ I 1 "!"! nvnllnlile 
imn A* i , '« , < | W»l«i.. New 

wXipo 1°0 siVv! " nrw 

P».SSiaxtar y e«,rr“f 1 ' «» »»»" 

lem vitin r ^ncloelitii ctirrlrti* 

Plmei ana 1 e.RlS- 1 * , ‘"‘ l •»'" 

(•reriex. of iwu 

iilV.ldlON 

K]j "Juyi- untb 

!?*? hei- Ca o ? 0 11 ,'i '••dim li- 

,h ! IubiBi.t .8 inni-h 

K fc!i&. 

[lOufum vltno" ' J 1 " 11 " “ ^«<P- 

SSBWSMB?.! 


gfOLlBHl 80010 °! 

4m tSSSSTTSS IlHN Xlx N|t(l- 
Qw>sn" reSo rd®t!x , * r * a,>< ) ni > 


7*1^1 r n » 

Sprint? «.T a i!gp 

R,. Wth 1 1 ForSVi 1 * 11 ,* ,BB ® «« 

bulTuhlo. ho, 5»6 In 


J? 1 ^ktiey wfi 7 

TEACHER 




*«« under 

* n . r ff»i 




'iteiwiiais 

BPsEWWF 

7 32400 


KUtKLEES 

SSSW“» 8BBBP- 

V 0 r r k U d .tr e RO w‘ F d i 3 D SS'^ ,Urv ' W. 

lQBa'for thu B?owino Al, lt U "i t (i 

nfto o" l0 ° v n a d , • 

te' is 7 SE&SFEgjs™' 

nlenao) frum *E„ 

I3!?ass 

SClVg§L VALLEY H,Q « 

(REF. 70) > 

viJMriiffiy 3 , s n ^ vvaUo ' w - 

e r A Of° EN - 

tlm Kclionl, blit Tor a aiafl»nki. V . 

•ha" "iVand ni a»t a r! P g i v\ nfl°currL 

KIHKLEBB 

^ERWmkSS8C n ' 

tnEF. 7 02°'' BUth ^ OTm V90 » 
Required for 3 1 at Auauat 

■ IB comprehensive echool. 
X'. h £ r ® »«*n®nj»c atandarda are 
high. The teacher appointed 
will be required to teach a 
few periods of week, or a 
second subject. 

. apply by letter to 

>n 0 Hand master at the school, 
atntlnu subsidiary subject 
"■ring curriculum vitae, J ana 
namina two rereraee. (394721 
• 132422 

UIRKLES8 

metropolitan council 

SCIiOOL* CLOUaH M,OH 

Wlndmlli Lane. Datiey. W. 

?i?ef?‘Vo$i IVFI 7 0LD 

Wftfloirad for Slat Auoust. 

„ losther or ENGLISH: 

^ A LE l . (or thlk 11 . ii 
Glrla Caniprehenslva achaol. 
Application forms and 

{ex^rrj^itsr 

whom cn m phi led forma should 

Me.TaWtf, ” S °° n ".fgft 1 , 

LEICESTERSHIRE 


<$&£££££$?& . 

for tlie oraenlent Ion of 
Hnoiiiriarv naurotlun. 

U|i|ier 14-18 

llnll I |S0 

ENGLISH 
kcule I 

Required (or Aun. *82, 
nit nnoruptlr mul llvaly Kn- 
tillsli spnrlolist . Hi-ale 1. tu 
lulu llir farulty of Inn- 
■nimin und cuinniunlrnilun 
wliirli lx luvulvud In re- 
nuiirriid hnnnil Inarnliid and ' 
team ti-Bihliifl in mixed 
-ililillv iiruuiut. Thn post 
lull lolly lor one. yonr. with 
■i liosslhlllty of boroinlna 
iirrmaiimii, offars dial*. 
Iniuilnn Ii|>|iai'llinlll0s lo bo 
involved tn curriculum On- 
vrlomiieiil and roinmunlty 
"tlilrnl Imi and should 
nppenl to new entrxnle lo 
llie pi'nl nseloii . Thn ability 
• offer skills hi ilrunoi/or 
inuslr rim Id iM'iixniii aihll* 

I Omni iiioiiii timltles for 
work wltliln tlin ilnveiup- 
Ina rnntnxi uf lixiirnseiva 
Arts. 

Further dnlnlls from Iho 


ITIiuijinJi Apply (no 
liirinsi with full nnrljoulme 

rsSM r lnu ,vvo ri mk 


UilCKSTERBHIRE 

IIOUNDIDI.I. COLLEGE 
Tliiinnastnn. Lalcaatur 
III Ihn l.olreitorxnlro plan 
fur tlie orDanlxBtlon of 
secondary education. 1 

llljlh . 1» -1 4 
noli nas 
P.NCILIHII 
Brail- I 

Required August. 

.. Further details from Ihe 
Ilr ud. Apply linmodiatoly 
(no formal with full par- 
tinilnrs nnd names and 

r WWW 

LEICESTERSHIRE 

JOHN CLEVELAND 

Poreat Vluw, Butt Lane. 
Hlnrkioy. Loirs. 

In the Leicestershire plan 
Tor the organisation or 
secondury education. 

WWfi* 

TSfcT 

...w;Sf ft tan 

•O’ and r A love . 
Two erale posts are avail- 
iiblu. unn iirtrmanoiil . 
tttlinr UMiiporpry to cover 
ni'itsrnlty Iravo uf •b»oitco, 

Further details from the 
Head. Apply , limpcdlatoly 
(nn forntet wlijt full P“ r - 
titulars end names end 
uddresses nf (WO referees 


LONDON 

KINO AI.FRHI) SCHOOL 


Sun Inilopniident 

(44310) 




film ® tha da taTitS a cT S ir !* P ti ® n d f whGr ? olh<,rw[fla Mated, are obtainable 

froiti and returned to the approDrlate Area FHnmtinn B ruf? S ^’ J^PPlIceEon forms for Headships should be obtained 
jnolo S ,d with .11 requests (SfipXtlm ta™“ A “ amped addn “»“' 1 envelupV W4 .!ee| . houfd ^ 

M CADTEaCHERS Required Saplembar 19B2. Sixth form work available for 

Primary JtfaWv .quelMed I and experienced candidate. Closing 

* date 2nd June 19B2. 

B?a 8 tton V ciovel ly °N r ^ksh am n ■ Exmouth (11-18 Comprehensive) School. 

(Roll 52) V wr UKenam P ton * Devon. Gipsy Lane, Exmouth. (Roll 2535) 


Head (Group 2} 

SSstdttt J 982 Ja 2 uar V 1983. Further 
»r ri!i!p.y M B tln forme from Area Education Offlc- 
Sm *82. ' PI '' mou,h ' PL1 >EW - Cloelng dete 4th 

deputy headteachers 

Primary 

BStii fol^usy. C (Ron%09) lmarV SCh °° K 

Deputy Head (Group 6} 

Required for January 1983. Closing date 4th June 1982. 

Sidmouth All Saints C. of E. Infants School 
(Controlled), 

Vicarage Road, Sidmouth, EX10 8UG. 

(Roil 93) 

Deputy Heed (Group 3 ) 

Required January 1983 or earlier If possible foryounaer 
bob range, to be responsible for display In certain areas 
of the school and Interest In mathematics, science and 
physical education. Closing date 4th June 1982. 

* It ft * ft * 

SCALE POSTS 
Secondary 

Exeter St. Thomas (12-16 Years 
Comprehensive) High School, 

Hatherleigh Road, Exeter, EX2 9JU. 

Seals 4 - Head ol Faculty of Mathematics and Balance 
Required September 1982 or January 1983 for 
Mathematics with Interests In Science education, to act 
as Head of the Faculty and to lead a strong team In 
curriculum planning development and evaulatlon. 
Courses to C.S.E. end '0' level established. Closing date 
7th June 1982. 

St. Boniface's College, 

Beacon Park, Plymouth, PL2 3JS. 

Seale 8 - Head of Geography 
Required for September 1982 In this Roman Catholic 
Voluntary Aided 1 1-18 Comprehensive School, a gradu- 
ate as Heed of Department, experienced In taachlng.thls 
subject to 'A' level. Applicants will be expected to lead 
a team organising pre-vocstionsl courses (R.S.L.I.) at 
sixth form level. Closing date 4th June 19B2. 

Exmouth (11-18 Comprehensive) School, 
Gipsy Lane, Exrpouth. (Roll 2635) 

8cala 2 - Specific Learning Difficulties 
Required September 1982 or January 1983 a well qual- 
ified and experienced teacher to be In charge of a newly 
formed unit. Closing date 4th June 1982. 

Newton Abbot Knowles Hill Comprehensive 
School, 

Exeter Road, Newton Abbot. (Roll 1376) 

Scale 1 - Mathematics 

Required September 1982 In this Group 12, mixed 
11-18 comprehensive, a graduate teacher who will fit 
Into the individualised MbUib schema, dosing date 4th 
June 1982. 

Tiverton (13-18 Years Comprehensive) 

School, 

Bolham Road, Tiverton, Devon, EX16 8SQ. 
(Roll 1126) 

Required September 1882. Prepared to take part In the 
school's extensive international Biahangss. Possibility 
of some German or Spanish, but the chief teaching 
commitment Is French - all abilities Including 'A lever. 
Closing date 4th June 1982. 

Okehampton School and Community, 

MHiF^ad, Okehampton, EX20 1PW- (Roll 
1400) ■ •• .• _ ■ 

BKpirW »S . full Pit. 14 >h. 

hsi ,\=K 

Salisbury Rodd Secondary School For Girls, 
Salisbury Road, Plymouth/ PL4 801... 

d** -tan. ««. 

public High School For Boys; 

Cobourg Street, Plymouth, PL1 1SX. 

(Roll 287).; . „ ... 

Plvmbton Grammar School, • • 
Seymour Road, Plympton, Plymouth, PL7 , 

3BH. (Roll 840} ’j* - • • 

Scale i - Religious Studies ■ 


Required Saptembar 1982. Sixth form work available for 
suitably qualified and experienced candidate. Closing 
date 2nd June 19B2. 

Exmouth (11-18 Comprehensive) School. 
Gipsy Lane, Exmouth. (Roll 2535) 

Soale 1 (Sevan Posts) 

1. Drama 

Temporary for one year to work throughout the age and 
ability range. 

2. English 

Temporary for one year to teach across ability range, 
mainly in the lower school (years 1-3). 

3. Geography 

Temporary for one year to specialise In lower school 
Geography (Years 1—3) with some upper school 
teaching available for suitably qualified candidate In- 
terest In curriculum Innovation and tha Schools Council 
Geography Project an advantage. 

4. Home economica 

To cover Cookeiy/Chlld Care to 'O' and C.S.E. lave! and 
some needleoran. 

6. Mathematics 

Graduate to teach through age and ability range Includ- 
ing work to 'A* level. Modern syllabus. Experience of 
computing highly desirable, 

6. Physics [Readvert Isement) 

The subject la taught to C.S.E., *0' and 'A* level. An 
interest In engineering science and/or application of 
microcomputers to physics an advantage. 

7. Religious Education 

Teaching through age and ability range to ‘A’ level. This 
la an additional post due to expansion of department. 
Closing date for all poata 4th June 1982. 

Bldoford School and Community College, 
Abbotsham Road, Bldeford, EX39 3AR. (Roll 
1754) 

Scsla 1 - Chemist ry/Phyelcs 

Required for September 1982 to teach Chemrstry at all 
levels with some Physics in this mixed 11-18 compre- 
hensive school. Good science facilities. Closing date 4th 
June 1982. 

####*« 

SCALE POSTS 
Special 

Exeter, Barley Lane School, 

Barley Lane, St Thomas, Exeter, EX4 1TA, 

(Roll 40) 

8oa1e 2(3) - Girls Welfare 

Required September 1982 to teach basic subjects to a 
small group of children and be responsible for home 
economics, art and craft, or another practical subject. 
He/she would also be expected to piey a major rale In 
the development of the curriculum In this new school 
for 40 maladjusted children aged 9 to 18. There Is a 
weekly boarding hostel far 18 pupils. Applicants must 
have experience of teaohlng maladjusted children and 
an additional qualification would be a considerable 
advantage. Closing data 28th May 1982. 

Exetar, Franklyn Educational Unit, 

Franklyn Drive, Cowlck Lana, Exeter, EX2 
9HS. 

Seals 1 -i- Special Schools Allowance 
Required September 1982 for one year In this unit for 
seriously mentally handicapped children end adoles- 
cents. Tne person appointed will work with b group of 
children with some additional handicaps snd will need 
to have relevant experience end the ability to work aa a 
member of a teem including professionals for a variety 
of disciplines. 


FURTHER EDUCATION 

Ivybrldga School and Community Collage, 
Harford Road, Ivybridge, PL21 OJA. 

(Roll 1400) 

Lecturer 1 (Temporary) 

Required (or September 1982 to Join Community Educa- 
tion Team for one year. A person with experience of 
interest In vocational training to co-ordinate and de- 
velop a school course for post- 18 students in conjunc- 
tion with a a pedal M.S.C, funded, non-school based, 
course of NTP nature. Industrfarexperlence could be an 
advantage .but not essential. Closing date 4th June 
1982. 


OTHER POSTS 

Eaat Devon Area 

1. Peripatetic Vfolln/Vloia Teacher/lnstructor (2 posts) 

2. Peripatetic Woodwind Teacher/lnstructor 
Scale 1/lnstnictor Rate. 

Required September .1882. Applicants should be skilled 
Instruments lists and preference WiU be given to qual- 
ified teachers willing to undertake the development, of 
. Interest In Instrumental work In Primary and Secondary 
Schools. Application forms and further details (S.A.E. 

B lease) from tha Area Education Officer, Morwanstow, 7 
arnfleld Crescent, Exeter, EX1 1SU. Closing date 4th 
June 1882. ■ ■ . i 


DEVON 


DEVON 








! '• .! I 

;i I I ! 


: 1 1 


•' I :•! 

U: ;;i 


-v 


SEC ENGLISH 


LONDON 


ST. PAUL'S (illll.b- 
SniDDl. 

ilruuV. r.ri'un, I.cidiIiiii wA 

Reriulrnil In S«-iiU-nil*nr 
ISR2 liijiimirN oriiilnnir 
with a HiHjd (I'.Miirf iik EN- 
CiLlStl tn touch tlic- nib.li'ft 
t hri.uiihtmi tli»* Schiiul. 
This is n Si’ll I «■ I pi)!*t 
which k’niild In* mrliiT lull 

nr purl -tilin'. 

Wrllti’il .lUlilli lit Inni 
with (nil i iin li-iiliiMi vlinit. 
iiannts. nildri’ivios uml *i’l«*- 

I ilinin- it 14 in I il-i’S n( Issn ri-- 
ri-iii-« mill sluin' lmllr.it tun 
til miy tiro iis ill s in* i- 1 nl In - 
t inns I In 1 1 t>i ml ii I’f mill 
mini ill inn sliiuilil lir Mi'll! 

Ill lllL> II lltll Mlhtl-I-HH. 

1 471IHf)l 133422 


MERTON 

LONiiuN noiunriui ot 

6 (Hit TON 

(IMULEIION cm.I.btiL 
9T0 buys oil roll, 
roqulrntl: (iruclunlo tpurhur nl 
Ennllsli - srnln I ■ 

Application (nr ms .. mid 

further UhciII* urn iivnllubln 

f rom the MemluinbliT , Wlmb- 
odan Collono. Erin" HHI, 
London. sWI 9 -INS. ,«!<••>«■> 
sn i ul M.tl.n. ISHASI) 1SJ43J 


NORFOLK 


KJ.KOn IllCilt KCIItKIL 
Somurlnn It mill. M ni-tlimii . 

Cironl Yarmouth N 1 1 ii-t 

-ion 

No. on Knl I . .170 
11/12 - 1 6 

Benin 1 

Tnachor «r Ennllali 

nequlrml for Sapiembiir. 
1022. Crnntlve, I «nnol na- 
tive applicants with u par- 
ticular Iitlerost In drama or 
remedial education will Ini 
particularly welcome. 

Application forms und 
further clatalla ublalnubtn 
from tltn NamltnHchHr at 
•Iib nchciol on rnimlpt uf 
a.a.n. uml should bo re- 
turned to the same 
address. 


F-AltLllAM aCKUOL 
Earlliam Ituad. Norwich 

No. on Itoll: 1200 mixed 
ISO Sixth Form . 

Scale I Ennliali 

Haqulrnd Tor Sflptombar. 
1982 a Graduate tn touch 
the subject throunbout the 


NOUTIlAMl’TtiNSIIlltK 


k i. r ri’ it i Nt> hisiiiii' 

STOI'l-nn [I IT. SI 'I till 11 

Itiiiidliiucls . Kct tiTliui. 

Ni<rtii<llilH NNIft Ml.) 

Brnle I n|ii->’IiiIIki tinirher 
■if Eiiiillsli tn ti'iii'li t In - 
sulilri'i tln-uiiiihoul dir- 

litiol . 

Drill Ill'll I nil nr III ui'- 
pllc a I Inn uml ■ ui’i’li n hi in 
vlttin in In- Mint tn lln- 
llmiilniiisti-r. I'Ii-asi- t-n- 

i llUlH nil .SAC lur al>-tnlls Ilf 
the iii'Mll Inn. l3‘li>’JJl 

1 .4 a 4 J 


NORTH AMl’TONHIIlKE 
C. I lira * A l'li IN 
nruAii I'Mr.N r 

i>i\vi:n i h v 
SOU ITIUlltmK 
l.'ilMI'lll’.lil NSIVt. 
BClItltll. 

Iliiwki- Kiniil. Iitisi-nl ry. 
Ntii'tliii(ii|itiin 

II nil nll'iail fair Bi’|itl-tll1i<-r 

ti-ai'lii-r m liinillsh with tlui 

I n ihs llillltv nf tillin' il in 1 1 in 
nr a mi 1 1 uli I v 1 1 mi 1 1 ( I •*» I 

I'niilllillllM | Saul aa II. 

AiipllLHilun (itrin uml 
furllior dniulls mini tin- 
Heudmnaiur. ISAE plrnsni. 
(180121 112422 


NORTH AMRTDNSIIIRK 

Wi: I.I.INCIROKm ICS II 
WEAVKllb SCHOOL 
Wiuivprs Itnual, 
Wolllntihtirminh. Northerns 
' NNR 3JS 

Hequlrod (ur Snptnmbor 
a Mast rr/hf l stress (Scalr l> 
to loach Rnallsh thrauiili- 
aut this 11-18 cu-nil iilu- 
t lone I cuinprnhnnslva 

school. Kimlisli Is part of 
tho cure curriculum 
throuiihotii years 1-9 uml 
almost all pupils en- 

tered for an asternal nx- 
a nil na Unit at tho end of 
Year 1 . either CNE EJiqlisfi 
(EMKEBJ or O level En- 
nllsh Luntinaae mid F.mjllsli 
Literature. 

Eiinllsli Is ii pnpulur 
clniluo In the si Kill Turin 
anil tlm A Invol tipper anil 


Eiiiillsli Is ii pnpulur 
clmliie Iii the si Kill Turin 
anil Uni A Invol Upper ami 
Lower -Sixth unions ut-e iil- 
wnvs taunnt aviinruinly. 
Tile Srhoul lias • rnrently 
cunlnirknU upon c:ity and 
Guilds I'onrsns und the En- 
flllsh stuff have tuknn re- 
Mpanaiblllty fur the 
toacltlnu nf tho llterucy 
component uf iheno 
courees. 

Thorn 1s n _ alrcinn coin- 


niitmeut tu druinu In the 
Application forms uml xi'liunl end aasistaiire In 

rurtunr dutulln on r»rn(|it this area would lie a holii- 

of a [unltr-np ji.a.n.. from fill iinsut. 

the lieutlinnstar to wnnm 

cunipleteil forum -should lin Anplicuituii forms uml 

returned ns wmil uh further details ..urn avull- 

miHSlIilD. able from ilia lleuiliniisler 

to vviuiin up nl lent ton rurma 
Should lin rnturiiuil an soon 

,u, tpr k W ! MWV“ 1T K-fiSS”."’"" '“ AE -.'SSSMi 

t ins well Unud, llciwilllllin 

,nrkrl '1.2i' 8 fe" 

Krill: 1 ajf^'inlKnil iRlR --L — ■■ ... - . 

J . y :r „ , OLDHAM 

hcaln 1 Lnnllsli METKOIJOl-lTAN IK 7 KOI/UII 

1 *Bfi qUl t«I ,U tn ach D>1 ^s u?ijec t 1 * 01 1 C AT f/jN (rOMMITTEU 

Lhrauuhoul • Am buliucil. AIJ.HKIV1 ON 

Nenae .file it.to.iil *»•»- Oim-wirth I.-ns, 

1 f-'nailur ruin, otnuum 

Kninuvnl aapenHca, i.nlii 

Within . Aulliurlly's KliDinn. • “J i'|P ,,l 111 |S!Ji ,, V'nmi f i!! 


OLDHAM 

METROPOLITAN IIOKOUUII 
OF OLL1II AM 

Uuitarworth l.ann, 
f.'ltaildr i't on. (Ildliitin 
Konulrod [ur Hup tom her-. 

1 |1B2_. at i lila iinwly-reuriio- 


Apply liy loiter nlvtiin 
niunes jif two.ruloruee und 
■Dtirrldtlluiti vitne tu . tho 


■ lencUnsHtor • fr< 
fnrtlior imrlliu 
pltmatil nrn aval 

SoWTHlaW' 


from whom 
llculara (a.a.n, 
avallnliln. 

SV" ’"‘Mt 


iilaoil 11-18 nilxnil Ciiiiuirn- 
liiinslva Kulmcd n( ulitnit 1 0211 
puplla. Kcnle I luuuliur ur t.u- 
tillah mill Bncntid l.niitiuunh 
liLus oi tiler sUbslilLury Umne- 
illnl or linullsli I.nniiuniin. 

SniKl ra.-u.ai. fur nmiUcnllcin 
furill .In the llniiil nl Jilt' 
Hcutiol. rutiirLinlilar tn llllil llll- 
ninillalolv. 0*8844] 132422 


SECONDARY SCHOOLS 

Lowlon Iftflb School, Norton Hood. Uwton. Warrington WAS IDU. 

|ii "1# mtad DMrofawffia) 

fjjEAO of ENGLISH 

1 Shavlnoion WQh Rohoot.-Shovlnflion Uuw. 8f|Bv)ngtori, Wtonn WNfl BAD. 
(Il-ltfmtaod oompcohiiwlvo) 

HEAD Of CRAFT 

SOALea u 

COMMERCE 

•• : 5 

,. TypIna'iMtlh aomn Duilnaa Qludin !■ 

■i Aspuf H|pi 6ofwoL FUtaCBo Haid. Aspull, Wigan WNE lYfl/ 

; |l»r18«nlW(IM(J¥ifOtwnB«o) , • . ■ ■ 

BIOLOGY 

-■86ALE 2 

Whwn'81 Tlximaa Mom R. c. High Schocl. Wood Stteei, Newtown. Wigan wns 
v OLffi! (11-19 ipbcad conijifofiniim] 

FRENCH 


HANllWKLI. 


Ml I Itlll'dl I I ’V N 

iiimtiiitiii hi - \Nnvvi l.i. 

n.vKiMouni mi in 
Bt’IKIOI. 

I I I • lit CulUlM «-ll«’l|Sl » «• I 

Kf-I|iill‘i'<l Ian- 7IU .llliie 
I <1112 f.NllLISII A N I l'(l II 
II 11 AM A - B. nlr I. rum- 

t iairiirv paist lair Ilia- si-tailld 

■nil uf Irrui. l.nt- 

tarrs lit illt|ilh ait lull, si ait llln 
full a III rla illniil i It or mill 
llillllfs alilil ■uMra-s-.a-s ail 
two i i-(i’ riTi sluuiin in’ 
(ill- Will’ ill’ll lllllll ril lilt 1*1 \ III 
Miami Ti-iii lirr. Wilderness 
l.nne. liri'Ut liner. Illriu- 
lam Ii mil 

l.’nllvilsslnii ail ■■ii*iii lii-fa, 

■ if the An t hurl ti will ill-,. 

■ llllllllV. All I'lllllll •lUlltll ■ 

liiiiitv eiii|i|iivi'r. i.tH.Inril 

I'VJ'I'J'm 

SHEFFIELD 

HIT V til Bill. I I II- Ml 

r. in >i : A i ion in. I 'aii (mi n r 

Nil TKi: IIAMl: BtTIOdl. 
Iillivaii.il I. slii'l I telil. SIP 

HIT 

lli'iinlml lur Bi-plruiljiai’, 

IPlf’j. ii 10.7 

tiiiiihM- uf lliuiltsh In tlm Up 
per Srhoul. m> tu ‘A level- 

Hi lain I . 

A|iplli ullon (urnis mni 
fur I lin r lint nils nrn nviilhililt 
[ruin tlm llnatil Tniu'lii-r ti 
avhaim they sliiiulil bn rn- 
turniiil within 2 wimki nf Ilia 
npiaenmni'e of this ndviarl Isc 
inii ii I 1 3 Jtfi.Vt i I .I".’. 4 2'. 


SHEFFIELD 

t:i i v m sun i ir.i.n 

I. I>IK. AT ION HKUAIITMLNT 

litMti.i ri.i.n HCiiiiiit. 

Lust llnuk Ituiid. S 2 JAI. 
ii I a - 18 Si-t . 

Kiniiilriiil fur Si-pti-nilinr. 

1 UH2 . ii tenrhiar nr Eiiullsli 
uml llrnmn , ben If I 
B pc. A suitably uuiiUriiid 
tuachnr on q fractlannl 
iippointninnt (28/40 innsamn 
per wiink, 0.7) to tnaih bulli 
English and Drama across the 
curriculum and nqa ratine. The 
tlmn dtatrlbiillun wuitlcl be by 
rltisrusslon. 

Application furms and 
flirt liar tie tails are avnilulile 
from the Head Tuachur to 
whom tliay sliuuld be re- 
turned within 2 w- tanks of the, 
nppeiiruiit'B uf this nilvorllsp- 
1381321 132422 

SHEFFIELD 

CITY OK H1IEFMELI) 
EDUCATION IlF.I'AItTMCNT 
A HUE YD AI.E OKANfJE 

xciiool 

fliistlnus Rond. Khefflelil, 87 
2 Call 




neuulrml for Heptomber, 
1982. u innelinr nr Ennllsh tn 
work In a well staffad and 


wall resuiirrqd department. 
Tho tlmn tablo Involves thn 
toachlhii ur English over tlic 
ruiiu 11-16 Intulinn ta tho 16 
In Lnnuuoan. and O and CHE 
III Literature. Bonin tuachlno 
may ho required III snnther 
subject area and candidates 
should express their prefer- 
ence. 

ApnHi'ntlnii furitis und 
rurtlinr dntillls urn nvallalde 
friun tliu llnud Teacher In 
w linin they lahuiill! tin re. 
turned within 2 wnnki uf tliu 

ssKwuhir f,,, “ ■mun 


SHEFFIELD 

CITY OP Hllltl-FIKI.U 

e/ii/catjon. (Jbl'Alr 


t.t«l»l‘A II* IN l ’« IAI.MI t IT I 
WUlIl It IV A It l *1 N | IVIIIIII 
Si ’HI II II 

Ni'iv ltu.iil. \1 i in ku airdliu' 

1 Van ill, I rll nl at . 

14 ■■iiiill i'll III -i>-|ilriiiliiT 

ri'Acimt nr i Nt;t ibii 

■ In, ill Ii ii 1 1 llliii- In ■ enai’at 1,1 1 

Wall k . lllllll I llaillsli 

Sill ll' W III! Nllllllll 

I iirllu-r ill-tails Iruiu lli-aal 
Is n.i’. I. i-14'JHHl 1 .424 JU 

SliltOl'SHlRK 

IIIIUA ritlN CIIMMI 1 III. 
<Tllll.slVYI.AN SCIU ml. 

\f,il< In ltu.iil. Ilsivesli'i *-S II 

2 A It 

11-16 t Tunpri'lirnslv a- . 

rLAt'Hl.lt miuiri'il tui 

Heplrmlier to (111 lmniiai In 
I li'lini't uli'iil ul r.ilillU'li anal 
I If, iiii,|. lii'iuliinli- pri-fi-i ■ i'll 
Applii MMuii Ini ms mid 

IiiitIut ali- 1 ,iI1m ifiiiii linns- 

In at Dll' ni huiil Is a I 
1 .4*1 4?* A I 1.4/4.!.' 

HTAFFOIIDHIIIUK 

r.DtttTA I'll IN ( I IM Ml IT IT 

i nusAi.l. nit. ii si imin 

I 'll ll ll Is llllil’. ( 'llllSItl I , 

\V<i|vi’rli,iiii|itiui 

HiKiiih'uil tor si-pti-iniiiT. 

mux. fmAi/i'Ai'i: it. it urn 

III I'.NIiL.IBH i Si nl n I I III 
ti'ili h ill nil 1 ,’VI'Ih. A sim iiiul 
sulih'i I <ir ,i np»i Ini t ii*i-i i’ll 
In I'l’inrilliil wiirk ■ uulil In* 
In* I i*f ill . 

t llilsnil Is ii I'lii'iil.'i i-fililr-n- 
I Ini urrn nild-wai liiiinuru ilia- 
Went MliHimds nlitl siirain- 
shlre. 

Applh iii lain (■■rms utiiiiiii - 
iilili' friun mill i el >■■ liiilil'' tu 
tin’ lli-ililti'iii It it' IN.u.e.i. 

All ii|i|ill> Hills in r ilskril In 
liutr Hull II Is till' I'llllllll 
I'uliiUTI's view Hint II Is ili<- 
i-li'iilili' lair tlielr rjniiliili'«-s in 
III* ini’llitmi's ail mi aiiiiironi Inlr 
Traile HiHa.ii. i1U4-)3l l.S/422 

SUNDERLAND 

SUNDERLAND CHUItCll 
llllill SCHOOL 
(The Church Schools Cai. Ltd I 
Mowbray Ruud. Sunderland. 
8R2 BHY 

(^T^lo phono No. U783 — 

Required In Smilcmhi’r. 1982. 
a well q null find teacher of 
Ennllsh to allure In the 
tuurhlnti uf the suhinct 
thruimliout the naninr sclmol. 
An Interonl In DRAMA would 
lie n rernminendatliiu. Bnlnry 
uirurdino tu nurnlium Scale. 
Ouveriuiionl Supiireniitiutloii . 

Application by letter with 
full curriculum vltun mill 
names uf two pnuplia fur re- 
fereui'u tn thn lleinlntlHii'esa. 
ns nuiiii ns ptinalbln, (3HH14I 
132422 

SURREY 

GLYN bCIIOOL 
Tho KlniiNway, Ewall, k'pNaiin. 
Tunrher uf ENGLISH. Hi. ale I. 
required fur 8vplninlic>r In 
this romprchonntvc nchuol fur 
boys auad 12 • IB. null 770, 
Inctiiillnii Sixth Farm of iionr- 

,V A°,°- poet will IniTuile 
tearllluo Rntlllnh thrniuihmit 
the Hrhuol to * A - level mid 
mime work in the dimli'P- 


work in the Un\ I'lnp- 

nii’nt of Drama und la sultnlilr 
for u probnt Imirr. 

Vyrllu to llin ktiindiniiHiiir 
with n. ii.e. lur flirt Ilf- ■■ lie- 


lulls. (AKtinat 


IliandinaiHiei' 


rtaqulrnd for Hontointinr, 
1082, a timclinr of lliiuliMi 
Hnaln 1 , 

Application furitiH and 

f urther .details are nvnilaliiu 
rum Llin (leadieiii-hiir lu 
whom, iliny nhuiiUI bo re- 
turned within 2 weeks uf tile 
U|ipnnriuii:D uf llila mlvnrtlaii. 
niunt. <3(1534) 1.43422 

SHEFFIELD 

CITY or HnUFKIUl.l) 

E|>1 (CATION Iim-AKTMLNT 
W loll WCIOl) hClIOOL 
ELui'nl Liiiiii, NO 41111 
Knquircid fiir Hi’iitombor, 
Jhh 2 ii leui'hiar of fliittl Tflli 
with nil Internet In t)rumu 
wrUoninii. Hraln I. 

Anplli’nlloii f niins ami 
rui'ilinr . detiiliH art- avallnltle 
triuii tile lined r ear her tn 
wliuiir they aliuulil ini re« 
turned willilil two Weekx of 
llin U|i|U’ni'rtiliie nl I kiln mlyep- 
HwiMWni; (3811121 132422 

SHEFFIELD 

CITY Cjr 811EI-T II.l.D 

umljj^loh Ituad, Hhernnld. 
PJUW lro, t P'P Nopt amber. 

is?,-, i rste ° r - 

/ AppllratluH forms und 
further, dntgiU arc ovalldma 
from the Hand Touclinr tu 
whom tliqy should be re- 
turned within. B.waaka of thn 

asBS! r a«iif 

SHEFFIELD ' 

I AKL MARSHAL ' 

nr^^Marshnl Uand, Hheffiald, 

floqulrod form'-- S a pie mb or, 
1982. a toucher or Enulleh.. 

BPS ' So " 0 1 
• Application , ' forms . ' and 
further details ara available, 
from ttta Head . Teach or to 
.whom, they ■ apod Id ba ri> 
turned within a waeks of the 

SHEFFIELD ; -r? 

imrwln liana. Snoff(e|d, 810 


WARWICKHII1UE 

rnmniAM nciiodi. 
Welsh Hoiiil, Hniithuin. 
Leailinlutiiun Him. CV. 1 S 
OJW. 

Kuniilreii Hnntemlii'r. 
1082, teui'lier or EiiiiHhIi. 

Appllcatloii form unit 

I iii'tltnr ilutnlln Irani lliii 

II nail at the Niliool IhAI. 

pleiiNr]. f.'hisluu ilnu* Till. 
June. 1 -iHH. (31)21 1 1 


WARWICKSHIRE 

ATI 1 1 '.it STUN I - . (tail)OI, 


IhTIJNK h 

Luilil Hlrrel. Alliemtnill-. 

UVfl I AI'. 

I 12-18 i:uii)|ii-eiienslve. 

1. I0U on mill 

Kequll'iiil Hnptnmlii-i , 
lllHS. ii well-ipiqlll lull, 
l-nerin-i |r und tninuliiallve 
keniihni' nl r.uiillnli . 

Apply liy leliei' in the 
Hand at till* niTiiiiiI uiii Ins- 


WEBT SUSSEX 


cVl^VtJ&OKE CATIIO Lie: 

HXK.W 1 ,rt. 1 ,,, 1 , 

Mixed I'utnpralianalve 
600 niiptle.. 

itoqiilrticl Hnntanibiir. learner 
of (sNCl I.IBITi Wnrinuii-tie >u 
teach so mu Itelinioua. Educa- 
tion an ndvantnao, A well- 


tpuchar is noun I 


Maths/science . v r- i 

Middle schools }:■- 

■ Wlgw WIBV Mbrif* School. Mdofq S(raM,.tMwiley. VAgeft WNt 8XJC. (10—13 * bee*. Si»off|e|d, 810 forln 

'•css.)- •. , v. -. ;• fik“ajBfcvi^wnE: 

SPECIAL SCHOOLS ' ■ ■ Beojh 

B °^ re SV'- rdrtRSr 'Seu.na .aro^vatlnble 

. (HiTfdoaKy HanoteJppeo Pupriaf . . V • ‘■'•I • -i rfom- the. Headteachor to n.Jj. 

• HEAD of LOWER SCHOOL ; - v " - V - 1 XS& fh ° ; ***** 


WEST SUSSEX 

Btatloa Road, > Ann 


ncHooi, 

norlnn. 


r»K nms koiu'atkinal suppl ement 2lsjj 


Scale 2 Posts and above 


CUMIIK1A 
I illlNIN IUI 1 Ml I 
K AI I l lllil I K si III ll »| 

Will’ll , .1 llia.iit. VV.. ■ kill. It, an. 
lllllll-, I I lallliaii'lirn-ala i- || . If, 

1 >'m a /-111 oil i 

tri|i||| i'll tin ■■I'lilriiit.i'i' |a|||M 
ai avi-tl >|iiiilil | nl ,<ua| i’X|lri|. 
••Ill nil li> r aif I ■rami iipliv 

tal lit la a’ I hill'll’ III alar aalllilnl 

Sl *h’ •! Iillrrr -I ,tu 1 1 tal aa ,.rk 
rsiriil |nl . Ilii' s, laiiul h.iv its 
iiwii , hi 1 ,1 ■ aaii* iii tlv || | r- -i a i-utra’ 
n( l.vkil'Vl'- 

Aiiidla nl Inn furiii’i in allialiif- 

1 1 mu tin- AkBIhiiI Him tm ll( 

I lllia .lllllll. 1 (lllllll Unit. •<. a, ti ll 
Hti***!. Mlillrliieria 

* 1 i'll I in |,r i fi- 

lm lira! l>> llaa- limit n| i tn- 

K ' 1 w lllatil 14 ilnv -I <i( I hi" 

Halt f-| I | 4 <-I 11 rut I 'I ’l l HI I 

I.VI h'.ll l 

DEVON 

i' 1 rn*>> bit ■ll«|ilni nl nilvnTlBa- 
ttl>- lit mi paiia fi.4. i.4'l|-l'J) 

1 .4 2ft'.» d 

KNFIKI.D 

II IN I II IN lit UIIIUt.H III 
I Nl II I It 

sr A n i • i I vs ii. r.. bithiiii. 

I i lit Ulltl.-I 

I Ink I llaai |ll' 1 1 1 J 1 1 ■ 1 . 1 nllllllll N 1.4 

hT V . 

It'-aliili P,| (ill- Sa|il«'iu|iri' |i,|- 1 
— 2 I a i ms mill, friai lirr ul 
( triaan niilit . 

I hi (iirilirr Inlm an. iilnii si-r 
iliiilri l •'’■■in ,| | ■ ll v Si ill,, 1 

luist 1.4-14.4111 13/61111 


t, A well- 
committed 
to work In 


Anamarlnn. 


« 'dun r v nii'Nni. 

KIllM'A I'l* IN I ll.l 1 A It'I'M i:n r 
HI'.VLNl >AK*a IIIVISION 

in k r \ in. i st tit nit. 

Eiinrtnn A a ••■me . lli'Ktiitilr, 
Hwuiilrs . Krill 
(irmiii 111 

tl - IK Mixed ( . a i in iii I'lii'iisivi' 

Ri*qulra<l (nr Hiaiiieinlii’r. 

1983. ii Saille J ii 

Toni her to inkr iTiurur n( the 
liriMiriipli li ut i iiiuiiniiiuit with- 
in thr lliimunltli's I'm nicy- 
(•puiiraiuht In t iiniilti as pain 
of n r ii - uni luet nl iirniiriiuiitii’ 
uud InmlM Mndi' III 'll' and 

C.N.i:. la- vii In III tin' run ye.ir. 

Ill 6 th ITirtu It Is t ai unlit up tn 
Ni'hiiierslilp level. file sui - 
I'essf ai] i iiiiIIiIii ti- Will hr ■•<■- 
pari nil hi aliitra (lie ailtiilrifs- 
I rn linn nl tin- Mmli 1 III 
axniilN 

Apply liv l'’tli’l‘ In the 
Ileiiilinnsler . rin Inslini a i.v. 
and tin- iiiiuir s mill nihtressrH 
nf ut lansl tun releraes. 
I'lrase nni'hina s.n.r. 

TI IN ltd 1 1 If D. WI’.l.I.S 
DIVISION 

III'NTl.l'.YB Ml, CONI) A It Y 
SCHOOL Milt HOYS 
t Tilvt-raieti IJiiwu. Tiiiitirlttdii 
Welle. 

Hmiiiireil Inr Hupipinhrr. 
1982. OF.OUUAUliv liiiiihrr 
to teal'll full ramie nl nhllttv 
up to ■ A level fi.cr.t. 

h i'll In 2 may lie uviillntdr lur 
an npplliaiil with tlia 

'ippi'OlllTnla PKUarlenip In tin- 

■ (•me 2ml In Ihe DnMill'Illiaiit . 

A iiiilli ut lunn In writlini m 

■ lie Heitdiiiusiai ul tliu Srininl 
US Bllllll ||S iiiibsI lile iilvluu the 
iiuuiea it ml ndilres'.a'i ul luu 
liruiunsliinnl rrfnrers. (3-I.4IIHI 

I32rr.ni 


NORTH UMIlKItLAND 
COOlIf. r COUNTY II Hi II 
Aa'klllMlt mi Itll. A *11 like. 
Mlirpntli Nl.n-I IIN<* 
primp III. (3 - IH 
Cnmpi elii’iialve. 99(1 luiptls 
liinludliiii 7!t In N I x Hi I m in. 

l-rlni I mil leitrhni nf ii; 

till V - hi nil’ 2 l.aniiirieiP ed 
4 lii'l- r i>*| ii Ii fit In lenill nil 
levels IiuTiiiIIiiii the iievnlaqi- 
liirul nf 'A' l.nvirl ■inii'sri. 
hill i-nssful a andlilnir will lu- 
l rsiiuiisllile fiir f»e;i.|i'oiih v 
llii'aitillhnin the m hind wank- 
lull within the fruinewnrla id 

hui'lul .Studies lull uni 

Arno. ItrlHUVllI ex SI’S mid 

Ifiililtiill nllnwnni e innv In- 
imviihlr . 

A iiiilli <itliiii fin in. | el in ii • 
ulila: liv 4 til June, send s<ie in 
llenallanrllnr . I.4'|ji.*i<t l l.tJOJU 


DORSET * 

S3B8t™“ ■■ 

n.'.'.'S”" noM ' 

J-va lx ICSC ,# ?^! n 9 to ifi 

isar-" 1 ,h 

'at'pihntToii l fo?m IB, r!. 0n «« 

ra n ir , " r ,tao '^i^, 
— 

DUDLEY 

RKDIHLI. SCHooi 

Ctirailip^tf 1 , 0 ,^ . 

irdara, 

la. I'KL/'l)’ love|P R n A .!.V 
iivnllulili* nn 

t'l' 1 11' I tliu I'.** r . wftV'niDMU/ 

ilitilrnHsi’H Of 2 ri(iM.rv 

ItamimlMrM** J53LS 
H.U.aa. 138010) "PSft 

ENFIELD ~~~~ 

LNhlcV.D ,,UnOUO »> OP 

si AN(i IT.A'fi ll.c. BCHrani 
imttllltl.M ‘-■SCHOOL 
Oiikthuriiii (toad. London Nil 
vnliintiiry Aldnd Uppsr Tier 

vnrrt* srnt* B r,nM 

Itequirpil Saptambdr, far l.l 
terms only beraiut <y 
niuliirnlty leave, a teunir m 
LLDGUAP tlY I Sea la I ) ta 
tern h C.9.E., ‘O’ and 'V 

levid. ficnlo 2 past ■vallibli 
(nr i-undidote ibla ta to u 
Sni und In the Dnpartrneai. 

Application (arini tfoolicin 
n.u.o.) obtalnabla from t?5 
lleadmlatrnag, to whom Uiir 
•hniild bo roturned within 14 
days nT tho appearance or ihh 
itdverilscmoiit. (36429) 

ISIN1 


Scale 1 Posts 


thoan important Unimrunnutx. 

Detalln and application 
form from, .tha, 

(B.n.f.e. ). (38474) 


equipped raellltlea. . . ■ THE OKANVll.Lli (tfJlljlOI. 

Pot alia nod appimUoni Durian Rood, worn) villa. 

rf rni»K 8urtbn-on.tr, „t 


fjjrtRSr.^oudla.' iartT^avatlable 
■rfoqi' tlio, •-.Hoadtoaclior to 
whorti. (hay. .ahouiu up >re- 


Qeography 


_ A arqle 1 leurhor. 
QEOOHAUHY In rnqulr rtl 
from Hoplambnr. 1UB3. 
Thii poraun uppulntnd will 
Jqjn a euci aneftil and en- 


join a BUCIHMI 
Uitiaiaatic tun: 
thnuphuilt til 
ability runpp 


lu . loaeli 
a lie and 


of Department 


Granville la n well atrur- 
lurntl, mixed 11 — 16 ltiih- 
prehauslvo with a nikouv 
I ntake uf 6 furms. 


"■ 80At.fi 38 " ■ ' • 

TWa rtpiacaa pninriptn Ktvgrttaanwnl (of HWd tjf Wahta , . • ,. ( , , 

. Atl tMf ft/' Acfurtri. I9i£. AopHuatloh. totnu uff turrnr 

■ ; avmttv* an sSafrwWa, from- and rftaqmsk h Si* Hwd cl (to Behoof 
■■ SwKwnad. (SA.&pfme.) Ooiifag eHHl a tMyilBSA 




SHROPSHIRE 

Required for Sop th_mb 01-1982. 

Further d atoll a from Head- 
maatqr ia.«.g.1, 

,!‘.»*i,i,!' -> V?a|»* • 'ti- 'i'-a/'t 

'-hd n-iiedR'aiFf 


SURREY 

SCHOOL . , ' 

Bolcontba Ro6d, Uok'lny , 

Dead 'of cfl&’dRAPHY Scni'n 

2, or 3 for multahla applUgnt. 
Experienced tnuciior ranurrad 
September, work' ta C8K. O 
and A level. 


ESSEX 

hT. MARTINK SCHOOL 
I Roll 1 060) 

llnmilnn Kill Lano, Hutton. 
Itl'alltwuijd 
'fid: 0277 221690 
(ieiuirauhy and/or Hlnory 
hi ale I 

Rcniilreil Saptomber. 1912. 
Tea i:her uf OBaaraphy 4cd/w 
lllstiiry in nliure tlia work to 
'A* level. 

Lurrli-uliim vitae and niau 
nl (wu raforcea to Hud- 
t earlier iroalecap i.i.e. 
pin a eel 

BAHhTABLE SCHOOL 
(Hull 1.430}. , , 

Tlmhrrlau Close, liaelldon. 
SSI4 MJX 


Tel: niisl lllllll 952001 
TeiuTirr ul Jleimraphy 
Si nlr I . ti 1.4 Aren 


AVON 

AVI IN «:ni»NTY 
Mini i l.i. i * I.lltl xriiu ll 
Kntstini Ituad. Itnlli IIAl 9 A II. 
A vi in Tel Iiiilli U.ViH'.l 
M Mmih 111. n.n.r. /Ilhi 
klnriiiii'iail fur Nepli'iubi'f uf '»•, 
mull] its luinslhlii I kii'i ea l ■«'» . il 
lein tier uf lli'tnirapliv 

I In i in ii limil Mu* si-luml In A 
I.eVel Sinln I. 

Detnltn avail Inliln h uin tlie 

II 1.40249 1 132*122 


IIEDFORDHIIIUJ-: 

ni m i ll nit n AiirA 

AcJiSr i WAHH 

K laldiVitiiun I'urn. Ili-dfuril 
Jiailnmetor: Mr K. (irgie 
I3-1H riMniireliwiinivn. No. mi 

5 ull 700 

>|: lied lord 4a.'l2l , 
innuirnd fur Kepti-nilier IUH 2 . 

I i Tear Iter i>r tlnuiinii'liv Hrnii; 
I. Ait liitPreat In etattlsiU'iil 
and anrliil utumranhy wuiilil 
cumpJnnieiit nxiMtlnn struimths 
within tlm diipurtuu’iil. 

, Anpllcutlun . Turnis and 
furtlmr details from the Head- 
master, x.a.c. iilnuHr, I'ieuxn 


AHlIWdllM'. , . 

t.i'iiduam rngulrnd to lift* 
t hroiMiliuiil one and ablll^ 

SSMW w..i 

inlet res* iruolscnp *-*■*• 

i>|oi|biii. uhaYS 8CIIOQL. 

Ihi'llVn wa v* lloiiil . Grave. EMU 
HM7» Thurrock 71361. 

limurnpuy Hcnla l |d 

I. mu He IJrlnae and I »«iu 

l-rlui tiv A h)w.imo payatil*. 

fli’uhi'.tiiliy xperlolisi 
(Uili'i’il He id ember III thle U 
16 I'unipri’lieuslve £ chl ?f l K 
Ability ill tnnrli xiimq Enaiu" 

an lUlvnittatte. . ,..|. r 

. ».Wi:y:". , sF.48 , 5r , " rDP i»* 


IlKItKFORD AND 

W0ltCK9TF.Il . 

cm INTV COUNCIL 
It nllllllll* 

HKSliVSHkW"* 

J iuii luir nl CiiuMiropItv “ 

Hi ala 1. 


apply ' iin'miTilatriy. 'cries nlmi 
dace Julia 7 til 108*/. 139.^28 ^ 


dkrhyRhxre 


i.aiullilnles muBf 
iilili' ul reulat'lnd C.Jp^To 
ul Stull win* [! n V L h p slid'. 

yJaS". 

nlill 1 1 V • ut* lu 0,,, * . 

Kulvenilty entrance;, • • 

A i in I lea 1 1 un . . J or P«n « 
filiTliiir iletiilla u.-d oo.i 
idllllllieil / r " r L'.tlTc Op « 4'iV ’ 

1IKRTFORD8IHRB t , 

**£: 

tount-ry Aided. 

T nmVee : Tit- 

b." v, .cW R a; l SS*25 

-nsaiiw B— 


,/.) > iti«ir. tj I a 

*1 •T-.-i s’. • ’ IT- 


Further partlulilHie nljd 
n liman. 

Dftrbyahlre . Comity 

Couhrll lx vn 'ifiusl gptti» r ‘ 
t unity nraplnynr. i4fiM4?ll 

Devon 1 . 

•*lii:!» -a 'l *’ ■ • ■- l 

i i'l t i 


Appklcutian mjjdjh*;- 


Ylfa. <30I»T> 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


secondary geography 

wantl nued 

KENT 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
Sucatlon Department 
ST QEORGE'riC. E. 

SjECONDAR^ SCHOOL 
iVMtwood Rood. Draudatalrx. 

T^enet Division 

Required for Sojitcnibor 19 82. 

teacher of Qnuflruuli In CSb 
mOCB 'O (oval- Scale I poet, 
rnlleae Laavcra rcuixlderd. 
CB ippllcotlon (onus to Die 
u-idmaetor at the Riiiuul. 
SStlna aeronil Hiibjei-t 

nifered tuQetlinr with the 
Sip*« and addruxsus uf two 

f# Re**d varlleuiiuiilt . Previous 
ippllcents need not ie-a|iplv. 

S iPP IDGE WKLI.K 

y N iiigh school 

Craabrook. Kent 

Holl 1030 (Mixed I 

naaiilrod for Septemher 2 982. 

xetituileitlr tauihor of 

s:;i: d ,o .remoras: 

JJlSr ta epoi-lallsutlun from 
ii Hiri upwards. C.h.li, Pint 
■n’ level courses established. 

r „,llint fedlllleH. 

E Ad ply by letter tn Head- 
■( the xrhuul hh sou it 
u Mialblo ai vi n ii n a nms und 

g^r.SUB^ pr<,f 73S» tl 6 n 2"j . 

kirelees 

METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 
SHutnALE HI Oil SCHOOL 
iirkdele Road. Dewsbury 
WF! 3 4H0 

iuquired /or 31 Aunuat 1982 
la UK* srowlna 12 - Ift - omr 
prehenlve flcliaol. a suitably 
nullified SCALE I teacher lur 
OEOOnAPHY PL-ross tho 
whole ane and ebilHy ronao 
up la 'O' level und CSE. Thn 
■atceiaful eppllrunt will be 
tipected to eeslat with day 
ind residential field work (litd 
to contribute to thn Modulur 
Couriee In llisturliul anil 
aioarapblral Sludlns. 

Appllcailon forms ts.u.e. 
■liMei from tlm llnud 
Tucher. Id whom roinplotnil 
loroii muet bn rnturiitid wit ti- 
ll 14 days of this until n lu 
Du pm*. I3B46H) 132622 


RIRRLEES 

METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 
H0NLEY HIGH SCHOOL 
Sutlon Road. Honlny. 
Huddersfield HD7 SOj 
[NOR 1300: Sixth Form 190) 
■REF. 70a i 

Required fqr 31 Aunust I9B2. 
SJ*char of GEOGRAPHY. 
ICALC 1. throunhout thle I I 
: !■ ,«n»Pr*h«n*IVB School. 
Iicludlna A* Inwnl work 
AtsdeiBlc standards urn hlqh. 

rla no apply l, y intter tu 
th* Headmaster at tlm srhi.nl, 
*ivlna curriculum vltun und 
oimlna Iwo rnf ernes. i.Y^JTOi 


NEWCASTLE UPON TYjfK 

|PM8(( M,TTO 
fflSvjLav gbm<jmap "y 

Ai hi// 1, fSTSV, »» n lhO l rirNt 

wnwa , a suitably qualiffiiii 
nu'L °f Geoaruuliy for 
■K&IM ta u Ki-ule 7 punt 
S*™* county Cu-edurniionni 

d t ?iT. pr W v « Vindi! 

*1*8 «i us lid . at Inn ur 
Kj.t , 2kRi,- , .° .■••‘in with 
OinSi » ..f 1 education nitil 
MHMnttaT. BUvanl “9e but nut 


V'° “MOD Tyne, 

SMS*’ 


OXFORDSHIRE 


tin I'Urini 
Hnptniiihei . 
1 te ni: har n| 


^SPPIELD 

Road. Shnrriaid. 87 

jwLVra® Boc - 


fc'fbc, A Sr the 


' SS IhS” W'» ara uv B l lobln 

BTK?¥ oi ® M K r ra- 

St a th'Kf® k ? ®r fhn 

ga*j«s86{ thu 


S^PlifeLD 




WMBfr 

E£^..WBaS: 

Jjjlr ^/u** and 

QL %*:** ova I la bin 

rS 

NHb a J y^}*»pj: 

I^hire 


SOLIHULL 

EDUCATION COMM1TTFP 
Aldnrbrook School ,TTEE 

n'fV , |BN ,,,d RQ “ d ' B °Hhull 

'.to:'" 41 TEACH ER dt8m p 6l ri 
pEOG IJA PHY is H c^i , 
range. l,,p ““» h »M th. Vb.ii^ 
naming 0 *, wo 

h" sent to the u.IkJ houl “ 

■ 434071 ° th " He " d 7jg§afe 


SCI* 2 Rosts and above 


WALTHAM FORE8T 
wi.WB5,S%’5Sg» op 
-nilfR 

tesis: A ' ,ai "” >5 
iSlffiEWfT 

ni.ck. TB “ ch " r: ” r - A M - 

,on se|, .tember 
■xcaFp® 1 * of Peography 

i 0 ’ 1 '’ M-IB y *« r » 

r ®Kjl®r on rocelDt of a.” a. 

.sVWsso.fr 1 ’ «* .a™ 


WEST SUS8EX 

JMberhorne school 

r?2i r t lor JP* Lane . Beet 
Grlmatend. Sueiex 
J-cula 1 — Geography 
■ Group is mixed 
^lyorehenstve with 1660 on 

S*ffli ,r *r™a^K September. 

ti?e,.K , i»» Gr rS ,l ‘“ to capable ol 

llnldw^e 6 :; advauteaef* 1 ‘ n 

I'lriue write to the Held. 

235 VliVJi E *«t Crime land 

43562- l 44394 I 132622 


WEST SUSSEX 

SOUTHERN AREA 
it If. an O MERINO SCHOOL 
■M?. 1 . 10 ^ Ko “d. Annmerlno 
■ 'Ittlehuni plan 

Required Septnmbar. Teacher 
ut abOGRAPIIY for mixed 
(.omprn ho naive School ( IV- 
}S'' . 1 * J® Punlli. Including 
I’»9, * n Sixth rorm. Modern 
well nuiiippnit raellltlea. 
Details and application 

W1RRAL 

ci^ £ Xfl%UA , r ,TAN borouoh 
C roas Lane, Unbluntuii 


CUMBRIA 

@ 

^ b 2 -' 

H tfc 

rurlBe^Jn. ./orm, «„ d 

from the obtalnabla 

School, CorkS™ Uerwen* 

(38249) edvartlioraant. 

13 2820 

Scale 1 Posts 

BARNET 

baKnet BOROUah op 

Usss, 

Tal: 01-438 9999, 

91 A". ° ralnm ® r ' Roll 600 

orS?H ,lr ^ d September 1982 

wJiPISrV T r r ! “-V’ 

192822 

BEDFORDSHIRE 

Biddanhem Turn, Bedford 
Headmaster: Mr R. Grace 
7S I: , Bedford 42921 ° * 

rod 700 OmPr ‘ h * n “ 1V *- No ' on 
Required for September 1982 . 
a Teacher of History , Scale 1 
£>■*■!• 2 poet may be avail - 
able for a suitably qualified 
Th^ candidate. 

aflWSppods'a 

fuM Rer dVt a*n a fro^We HaecL 
master. 6.A.B. please. Please 
■PPly. Immediately. S 'cToalna 
dele June 7th 1982. * 39 ^ 29 " 

BERKSHIRE 

THE FOREST SCHOOL 

5o°r«a?? W,nn "“ h * 

N g O.H. 1060 (Academic 6th 

KUcrs, 


acnool ■ 

Application forma end 
further details from the Head- 
maeter at the echool (aea). 
Clpeina data June ?. Barkl 
■hire County Couqrll ia an 
eo^opportunity -ntplo^ 


Cross Lane, lim 

tefruve. 




IHT/CkEOGRAI-ilUR SCALD I. 
. .Tu tanrti Imth subjects to 
•I 1 and 'A' lovul. Thu person 


atipolliiad will bn uxpactnd to 
Invulve himself t**’ hereolf In 
the Klniii Ntutllea work of the 


iitinurlinenl. 

, A i*pl lent l on forms may 
tihtnlitnd frnm tho. Head Mr 


ter ut tlm srhoul tu whom 
tliev should ho rotijriiod as 
si uni as iMissIble. UMll^ 


History 

Heads of Department . 

HKXLKY 

.ONPDN UOIIOUOII OF 
I I'XLI’.Y 

IliXLl.Y GRAMMAR 
hell OOl. 

86(1) Mixed. ... • „ . 

innaoil l.nun, Welling, Kant, 

iuA'dd 9988 

hm?i| ,l, ur* RAM fn&J B K 
Aaslstaitun with removal M- 

r ni|*aa. Innnl fooa and dls- 
iiruiinco allowttni’o u* 
cuneldoreil. L.A.A, £491. 

Pur, har UftKlla may bo 
ubintnou from lha School ana 
niqiltintlmln should , Jl D , . 1° ' 
turn ail by 2.9 th May. < a y|§g| a 


NORFOLK 

No. nil rolli 1 139 

Brule 3 

Head or Hlatory . 

. Ranulrod for September. 
1982, an nnthuelnatlc sod 
suitably experienced 

Taaclinr to Ined «»**■?»¥ 
department. 'A 
level nnd C.S.B. Couraea 
ere taught. 

Application forme from 
and returned to the Head ■ 
muter at tlia f?hool. 
(33003) jj”iL 


COUNTY COUNCIL 

£&B S al URY f>«^MAR 

b\i k a S |,By * ,4ft0 “* ihe 

Ranulrod September, graduate 
J®.”, 1 " “ ■I'onB Department 
and to teach throughout the 
O'? Xhd Open 


Srholuretlfp IsveL 
Aiipty by lelto 
master giving full 
namoe or two refi 
Aaaiatanea wltli 
noiieos ji 


letter to Head- 
full details and 
) reforoes. 
with removal ax- 




SUFFOLK 

C^STLEMANim UPPER 
^natern^vonun. Hnvorhlli 

rolT. , TaVin v yi'h * ,a 

®h d n.-« r ?fyj igsacg 

ijn nfeAD nf HffTORY (Hcalo 

Appllcutlona by loltwi to 
In rl 11 (To Ip rrlt ’ll Util vilaD.to 
tlie llniiiliiinstor by 23tn May, 


yi* ilniftlinnMer by 23th May. 

thpart^^Vur'K/thir^ssRs 

■^Rb" final Ii’ it* si Uli "uthurlty 

is i>r«par<*d t«» tiivo aympatita- 
lli tnnaiilaralinn tu ll'p Ptovl- 
si 011 «t hniistnii for teaefirre. 
I.4UD70) 132818 


CAMBRIDGESHIRE 

KIRBY LODGE 
Require In September, 1989, 
History teacher. See indepen- 
dnnt School*. (44329) 138882 

DERBYSHIRE 

TUB ORANVJLLE SCHOOL 
Burton Road. Woodvlllo, 
Burton-on -Trent . 

A Scale 1 teacher of 
HISTORY la required from 
Boot ember. IBB*. Tlie par- 
son appointed wilt Join a 
auocaaaFul and enthusiastic 
toam lo teacii thi-Dughout 
the ago and ability range. 

r„ r fe?'6tt.: ^ Bdy 

Further particulars and 
application forms svullsble 

a om the Head, b.a-b. 

ease. 

Derby ah Ire Oountt) 

Council la an equaioppor- 
tunltv employer. <46244^ 


DEVON 

please aab dl*jrtay6d odvar 
ment od page OS. 


DONCASTER. 

sBimm 
i? taws 

gllSll. , . 

uiainrv le well estab- 

expurlanca. . 

Appllcatioh. Id 


|t! L ^c 8 ha H e!P a H R ^5 IOOL 

geseacerr, Doncaster, DN 4 
au d Sh1i UG "“ ".C?, 'J v «‘pd from 

^d'dros a> *^ r 1 ■* fhe T nijovo 

P°WJ!a!F% fo f?”-"ouJ3 

?ib £ ggmr^ 

GLOUCESTERSHIRE 

8 CHO^L NHAM DOUR N8IDE 
jyardan HIll Road, 

riumiF. 

?8?me n t * e 4 hor , ®» PI HlSlwi 

rrrh.nJ » A * nd to «On- 

fri 111 ! 1 *. to , *n Economics/Drlt- 
■t h rnB/irir 1 *.* Sooiotv course 
level. Ability to 
useful lBVo1 Sodoloqy 

fro^ p ^®« n .ti?r? 5 9'YV5 , i ““ 

132822 

GWENT 

gSGgVCSWAWSL 

SCHOOL 

v ^ * ■) a r o^ln ■ 

r AV d i . frotnquBdGajj lose hors 
Top Ina followlna vncnnclofl 1 * 

SSJgff teefspo"?* « 

amlnatlon work. 

forme and 
hv.ii.iTi. ,r, f? p P“U! >n where 

BL r .P cl S r °f Education. County 
av*A' Cwn bran, Owen*. NP44 

Sid °2e r ?S?i?Lq 0f to"-°,h*a 
■ ,ho 

HAMPSHIRE 

ROBERT MAY'S SCHOOL 
Watt Street, odiham, 

Hampshire. 

N o e R C ?S^0 rOh " n * IW ° 11,1 8 


required for ' September 1 992 
7 .M 1 po, f Hlatory teacher 
far thle newly built aompra. 
henslve echool to teach all 
ability and ana groups to -o’ 
level. Interest and experience 
of Schools Council 13-16 Pro- 


t *« e distinctive advantage. 

.losing data tan days after 
ihe appearance of this edver- 


HERTFORDSHIBE 

COUNTY COUNCIL ' 
Bast Herts Division 
PRBBDALBB SCHOOL 


X) Hoe Lena. Ware, 


subsidiary Geography to. teach 
the former at lanec to GCB 
Ordinary Laval. A.L. . work 
available for suitably qual- 
ified candidate. Oeogrephy In 
the lower pert or tbe echool. 
Scale 1. 

Prasdales has modern 
buildings In Its own .spacious 
grounds and Is within easy 
reach of London by tralo or 
Oreen Line coach. .. 

Applications with curricu- 
lum vitae, any recent testimo- 
nials and the names and 
addressee of two . referees 
dlrecj to the Headmistress. 


HERTFORDSHIRE 

OWEN'S SCHOOL 
(Pounded) 1613 
Dugdsie Hill Lane. Potters 
Bar 

Trustest The Worshipful 
Company of Brawers 
Required In Seplember. 1889, 
a graduate teacher. of History 
to ‘A* level (Scale 1 plua Lon- 
don Fringe Allowance), at 
thla Voluntary Aided mixed 
5V4 P.E. purpoap built cfin< 
shenslva 


P.E. purpose built cOm< 
ans|va School (Vlth Porm 

ndldatea should apply 


Cendldstas should apply 
(no forma) to the Headmaatbr, 
aa aooo as possible, plying the 
names or two referees and 
Indloatlng Interest -in games 
or other extra Curricular acti- 
vities. (3B0B8) 132822 


HERTFORDSHIRE - 

NICHOLAS BREAKBPE/ 


55 


Somerset fjjt 

Appllcajlane^ere Invited frain suitably qualHIed and axnnn I 
enced teachara for the followlna Dost9 Untss** " I 

nxt &r do,ai,s (sa - e " 

Plaase quote reference 21/5 on correspondence. I 

SECONDARY DEPUTY HEADSHIP 

Bunton AU9UBtln * 01 Can,9rbury School, Prlorewood, 

S SS CJl^ - -^TOsss 

ffin a r 0 hSaa be “ m ' n “ 1 ° d ™ mbora « ■> 

(SAEJ ,rom 

Cloelng date: 10th June, 1082. 

SECONDARY 

Richard Hufoh Colleae, Taunton 
(15-18 mixed, post 10) 

Rx September 1882: 

(f) Temporary appolntmem. GRADUATE Biologist 

Scale 1. to teach mnlnlu nl a i«-,i 


o "ppyii iuiioiii, unBUUAlb BOLOQIftT 

Scale 1, to leach mainly at A level (Social t™?! 5 !’ 

ESfe'ata a 


teUe , r *° ‘he Principal, with currlcufum vitae 
On0 be ' n » 

From Cpllege, Frame 

CM 8 m,xed comprehenBlve, 1483 and F.E. Colleae oom. 
blned on separate sites) °° m 

For Seplember 1882. Teacher or SCIENCE, Scale 2 m 

Ml 6 SffSBi g*-' m -M 
Kina'S, nl ‘' ,PKM 10 cwWbul * "> 

Prease indicate particular skills. 

Applications in toll by totter immediately, to Ihe Princitmt 

endorsino an vnlnrvi urHh nnot ntia aa#* ^ — i_ _i n nrreipai, 


po«t Utlo^arS oricto Rlniij SAEror 
lob description and appticallon form. H ,or 

Blake School, Bridgwater 
(1 1—16 mixed comprehensive. 860) 

For September 1882, teacher of PHYSICS and COMarNEn 
NUFF&) SCIENCE and GENERAL SCIENCE/Scale ™ S 
teach aorass the age and ability range. 1 

AppUcaUons by toner, as soon as possible, to the Head at 
the School, giving full curriculum vitae and names of two 
rararees. 

Buckler's Mead School, Yeovil 
(11-18 mixed compreharwlve, 1300) 

For September 18fl2: 

(I) Teacher of MATHEMATICS. Scale 1, to teach throuoh- 
*B® and ability range up to G.C.E. O toveT 
(A) Teacher. Scats 1. In REMEDIAL DEPARTMENT towork 
on llterapy soatas development In email groups isnd 

^asssasE* 71,6 nw *® a s 

Applteatlon by letter, as soon aa possible, to ihe Head at 
the School. 

Mayorova School, Bridgwater 
(11-10 mixed comprehensive, 860} 

For September 1982, a suitably qualified teacher for 
CHEMISTRY, Scale 1, to leach throughout the School U p to 
0 and C.S.E levels. Please Indicate second teaching sub- 
Ject. Vacancy due to promotion. FUrthar Information can be 
obtained from the Head (Bridgwater S5531). 

Application by (alter direct to lha Head at the School, as 
soon ae possible with the names of two referees. 

The Blue School, Welle 
(H-18 mixed comprehensive, 1330) 

For September 18fa. leadker of METALWORK. Ability lo 
aeelat with Technical Drawing or Technology would be* an 
advantage. Scale 1 could be scale 2 for suitable aooUcani 


1, at this Roman Cfithollo, 3 
form entry, all-eb my. . li - 

i S co-eoucstloael sahool, 

uter Fringe Allowance pay- 
Bblt* 

Application forms-_and da- 
tells of post from Handm aa-. 
ter. Sand 


HILLINGDON 

> Or,D H°^S§g^ M0F 

BiflKo ^e ev ‘ aE 

(Number 101 


...rougbout 
ability . rer 


ler of 
to 

■ut tn 
range to 
• A ■ i.imIi 


letorv 

9* - ■jo 

ability twin «« C.6.B, 
‘O’ and 'A levels .. 
dates should bn syrup nth 

gbSS 10 

project. It Is hoped that 
csnaldetee wll) also by In 

BSSfWSS.' iS’-L 1 — 

don. Allowance .P*W9|« 
Please apply l» the first 


AppllcSIbn by letter, as soon as possible, to toe Head at 
Ihe School. 1 

The Weat Somereet School, Mlnehead 
(13-18 mixed comprehensive, 1057) 

The school catchment area includes Exmoor, Brandon and 
^ . Quanlock Hite as well ae the coastal area. 

T^c&ER"ip^fs\oRY Ws I For September 1882, Tembofary Teacher of ENGLISH, 

j. 6t baneiia, s I . Scale 1. lnttlany for the academic year 1082/B3. An Intares 

^ rra _c^-|^ucst^nS ! ' „A C I ■ deKf? 9 WS 8b,e wplta Ba aa C ' 3 - E ‘ ^ 0 

AMticaBon form, ratumabla ' aa eoon aa poasibla. and 
deSto (8.A.E.) from the Head al. the School^ ‘ 8na 

PRIMARY 

Croweombe C.B.V.A. Primary, Taunton 
(5-0,30) 

For Seplember 1882, Infant Teacher, Seals 1, lo teach 5-7 
year olds. An experienced and mature practising church 
communicant would be preferable and a pianist Is essential 
AppUcaUons by tatter, aa soon aa possible, to Ihe Head ai 
the School, with three testimonials and names q( referees, 

Norton-Sub-Hsmddn C.E.V.C. Primary, Sloke-Sub- 
Hamdon . . ' 1 

^ Seplember 1982, experienced teacher, Scale t. tor 
reception dess. .• ' ; 

Willing lo Join hv.vtltaga acthrilles and 'ability lo halp with 
Games/P.E., an advantage. : 

AppUcaUons, by letter, as Boon as possible, to the Head .at 
the school. (Enclosing S.A.E.). 


IM 

if. 

r ‘ y f. 

jl '0 

m 

■inf® 


111: 
I?'? M 
ti.'Z 



11111 IIMI * H || '» ATIONAI.SUPPUMt» 


I’ •! ' I 

! , .i ; . 


i * '• 

i . ; 




!ON:i ; 

i| )> : ‘l .■ 

•'4 r..j 

j; 

ifi 


111 





SEC HISTORY 


II UMBERS I UK 

unucATioN n'MMi r i , i:r 
Grimsby nivli>U»li 
W 1 NTHINC.ua M hi: Hon I. 
VViii'Inliy A veilin'. nrlmsl.v 
lli-oufri'ri for h«*itf ember. 

19 HU: (iltAIMIATIi THAI lll.il 
OF II 1 STOHY m Hlinn* In tli" 
umi'hlnn of * , *}iii>J , * , 'f 
tiirouillioiil 'lie irlii'i'l iiii'linl* 

I mi u.c.F.. ’If' mid ' A Invi' I . 

Apiilfiulloii l>M'n» mill 
further liiforni.il lull uliitiln- 
iihlo frum I lie Until rci.-liiT ul 

III!' M-lllllll III tvhlllll 

liiruin Hfiitnlti (■<< ri-nirfiifil 

tv I tliln Iv » ul ilijn «(1 v t - r - 

I I nnmi'iil . I 3 H 4 .V.I) MJK'Jll 


mi'NiY uoiiNtril. 
I.IHJCATLUN IHII'AUTM l!NT 
CillAVENHAM III VIMON 
(iRavk si: n 1 1 M.num. i oil 
Cllltl.S 

I'nlhdiu Itimil. (Irn fi'H.-inJ 

Tnl: i 0414 » ft 2 H 9 r> 
cl 3 - IB Upper slIk.ciI ihiii 
309 Sixth Kurin 029 . Iai'iikIv 
actuliuiilri. 

Mlxnil Staff Konin 
lleiiulml fur Si- |i ti<niln.r, 

1 I 1 B 2 - Gruilnali' fur lllMtcirv 
IJrpnrt inriit . Ill'ilury, I-:,- tum- 
mies mill lliiviirimniiit ur** 
taught- Ui Ci.C.E. Advu III ril 
L-Dvol, t,iw to OrdUiiiry Level, 
and the lUipurtmunl tem-hon 
name nnn- 0 Nam I nation 

ciiiirtpa. Alilllt v tn tnurh till- 
lory lo Ad vu uniiL Li‘v«*l iinnmii- 

tf.ll. VV 1111 II till. 'SH III hi.lli with 

Dllirr rmirn'l Hit .itl vu util ll" . 
This IVUIlill l»l II Mllltlllllll |Hlll 
for u imt'lv uiKiliriiid i-iitriinl 
in lint priifi'M^lnil. 

I'lnoHii in. ike iiiiiiI 1 1 iitlrm 
dir net to itii' 11(11111 hi I mi ri'tt. 
Mr*. M , II. null. M.A.. I ll- 
CluilliMl t urr I ruin in vltiu* uml 
nuinlnn twn ruli-ropi. 

CANTEKUIJUV OlVJHION 
QEOKIREY CHAUCER 
SCHOOL 

Spring Luiik. Canterbury. 

Kail I 

A uraduiile Ik required to 
touch History hid tu 'A' (avail 
und rnlated Humanities 
counts* from September. 
1982 . A aironu commlcmonl 
to moating ilia nrnria of pupils 
throughout Che ability rang" 
Is Imparianl and a snennd 
teaching subject would ba 
helpful. 

The school has a mined 
jinvan-rarm autry with a sixth 
form approuchlnq 2 UO. 

Full lotlnrs of. appllmtion 
with it.v. itiitl numlun iwn ro- 
furors Should he uiihnilttnd tti 
the Ifautlmiieti'r us mi on ns 
pOHSlblo. y.A.E. for fur llinr 
details. ( 3 D 380 ) IS 2 B 22 


NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE 

E ducation committee 

EATON SCHOOL 
TEACHER OF HISTORY 
{Scale I pastl 

Required from Hoptnnliar 
1 BBS . Tor win yanr In thn first 
instance, a suitably ■ mtiliriiMi 
taarliar of HHtui-y for 


i ,K ICJ ESTEHHH 1 UK 


KINO > KWAIIIl vu 
< iimmuni rv t en. i rid. 

Si'd mum i»il\ i' 1 'tl si- uirnt 
miller Si icliil Stmlli'* Si .III* 
I . I 4 llll. 1 t l.lSH'J'J 


I.EICKSTKHSIURE 

■ IIC lll'.AIfC II AMI’T 
iiH.i.Mii: 

Millin' Why . tlniltiv . 
l.-li'i'iter 

III IMi* I .i'll ■•Htori.lili'f |iliiii 
tin- Ilia- Ol', iillliH.il lull «'l 
Hi'a-inlilni'V tllllll'all lain 


Ulllii'i- I 4 - 1 1 
Hull I l(i r > 


1 BBS , for onn yenr in thn first 
Installer, a suitably uiiullfliMl 
taarliar ol HHtui-y for 

aiipolntninnt tn u Bciiic I post 

at this Cuumy Cu-oiiui ntluniil 
Comp at in nat v<> School. WII- 

Ilniini'Bs to usslst with liny** 
I'll Vtflrail Ldiirutlon mial iiiimn* 
an udvniitiiiiD. 

ApiHJi - at Ion forms uml 

riirthnr pai-tli'iiiurs are obtain* 
able frnm anil ri'llifiiiilJln in- 
Ilia Knud Tiiiirlinr, Ilaialou 
Hr lion 1 . Jn silt n ild Pili'k VVi'St. 


county off 
ciovoinna 


IIIhTIHIY 

Si- ii I n I — ri’iniuir.irv 

Ha<i|iilii'(t AiiiiuhI to mi'- 
Kl' mlai Yi'itr's Ii'iivm ul iilit- 
■- 111 ' ll III trail' h Ills | « 11 ' y 1 7 1 tl 
ailltl I tltli a ■* ill III' v nil'! 
Niirlnliaaiv to 'A' Irviil unit 
lll%ti>|-> utltl I lit i-ill' alt i* at 

IttinliillM Ins III 'O’ li>Vi>|( 

cr.H.H. Cliinlnai ilulr Inna* 
2 ml. 

1 'iirilior ilc I ii I Ih frami the 
Hrnil. Apiil v liiinimllninly 
fno rnrniHl vvltli lull imr- 
tluu lairs and nmnns mid 
iiddrossus uf two rnferoes 
Csun. I. 1 RA 70 ) IS 2 H 2 U 


NORTH YOKKHftlUK 
CO IIN'I Y < 'Ot INCH. 

II A It II < Hi AT L ORAN 111 ' lilt) II 
SCIIOOI. 

Avimi'IuI ■< Itoad. Ilurrmiiili' 

I I - IH Ciainpre h i* iislva- 
It v ii Hire U la>r Sr pt emtio r l'JH 2 
ii well quullUnd Urudnutn to 
tear Ii II 1 STORY (Srulr I 

f iaitl, liilllully tu Sill form 
oval. Ability and wIlllnonrHs 
to tench an inn Middle School 
Ennllsli Is eascretlal; help vvltli 
Guinea ileslrabla. The schciol 
Is a larau thrlvina community 
on ana site with excellent 
facilities. 

Apply by laltar to tlto 
llcndmastor iilvlnn full rarnrr 
datalls and names and addren- 
ass of two referees. < 38462 > 

122 B 22 


SHEFFIELD 

CITY OF SHEFFIELD 
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
ADDEYDALE GRANGE 
SCHOOL 

Hastlnas Road. Shefflald. S 7 

aoii 

tulred for September. 
lBIti. A tonchor of History, 
Scale 1 to work Jn a davelou* 
Inn dapartmont. The tlmatnble 
Involves thn toarhrna of ffls- 
toi-y over tlia ramie 11-16 


I'oin thn 
vliciin til 


liny (all mil 

tiirimii with I it a wee Un uf tha 
ntipaaranre of this iidvnrrliin- 
mpnt. <983101 . 1328 U 2 


n y////T 


SECONDARY SCHOOLS 

. All posts are for September 1982. 

Scale 1 CHEMISTRY 

MANOR SCHOOL 

01-l6ml]{edcomprahonGfvB884onroll) ' 

' Owlon Manor Lane, Hartlepool. Cleveland T$ 2 S 3 PS. 

Tel! Herilapool 6 7016 . 

‘ Scale 1 ENGLISH 

HENRY SMITH SCHOOL 

{ 11-18 mixed comprehensive 1 164 on roU} 

; KlnqO&wy Drive, Hartlepool, Cleveland TS 24 SPB. 
Jel-Harllepool 60780 , 

'UURENCEJAdT^SSFTScRSSr ! . 

• (1 1 - 1 6 mixed comprehensive 1 71 1 on roll) 

1 Church Lane, Gulaoo rough, Cleveland TS 14 6 RD . 

. Tel: QuIabdroUflh 36361 , - 

Scale 1/2 COMPUTER STUDIES 

: A Scale 2 poet Is available fdr a suitably experienced teacher; 

. ^Courses to CSEand 'O' level. • ' r 

Sdale 1 HOME ECONOMICS 

-to leach Home Economies and aided sublecta throughoui ihe 
'.■sohool. ... 

Scale 1 ENGLISH 

I BI8HOP&aARTH8CHQOL 

i i 1 - 1 6 mixed comprehensive 935 6 n roll) 
larmWaatel^e.BtotWon.CtovelahdTsloeTF. . 


i i 1 - 1 6 mixed comprehensive 935 6 n roll) 
larwWaatel^e L Btofckton,Clevelahd‘rel 06 TF. . , , ' ' 

. . . v, 

■rS&ifeT ENG LISH (D RAMA) - % : ■ > 

< (B YbALES SCHOOL : . . r ’ •; • =■. V ’ . r .' v) * - i ■ ;• 

'^( 1 1-16 mixed cohnprehanalve 1 flf 0 on ron)’ . ' m *i.i .'/■ 

IMatlborocrah Road, Mmake, Radpar, CtevetandTSIl; BAR. 
vTej:Mfddlwbrough'4B2e32. ; ■ ■■ t 5 ' : 

Scale 1 MATHEMATICS ' ‘ - 

’’NEWLAND 88 CHOOL F.C ,J, ••••■ v 

•* (1 1 -16 mixed comprehensive 634 .onlro^l)■: ■ , 1 ■: 

SaRefcjili Avenile. Mictolfiabrouah, Cleveland TS 43 JWr ! ’ W • Vv 
VVT 61 :f^roleabrou gh 666311 ■ / ' - . ; ; ; * ; ; , ' V'-'' 

■ 'Ftnartolal aaelstenae with ho use h o|d refnovaioxpahaeaia.v' ■•'•v- 1 : 
'.’available in approywea^ea,'.., 1 - . .■ 1 


HKFTON 

Ml.lltdphl I I AN Ita III! ltd'll 

i'miu'a ii ! >n a iiMMirn i 
\\ Alt WICK mil. AM nil. II 
v, IIIIIII 

I'lia, Mill'l.lll Will. N,'ll!a*rta»»!. 
Mail ■la-vslala 1 . 1 " .1 I <J 
| l . 1 H (• 1 . 1 * . Ml Val I v ■ HI l 1 
Willi Mvlll tail I" .. .. 

I I.MI'IIIIAHI tl *11 I* ,‘* , l 
IIIMIIHY l S. ilia' ll l-a-i mil l'll 
|ll|- Sa'|ll I'llllaa* l*. 1 "It. I I "I •IM*' 

va'all'. , 

Api'lla ■illaiil I air Uli ■‘"•I 

llll'tll«‘l' (ta'tall l*a lire , 1 V al Ilia till' 

■ HI I'a'a ■• 111 * all II ■a.ll.r. I ■'!•■■« till' 

lla* mil ail Ilia* fu'tinjil. 

Clnslini alula" 4 1 ll . Ijihf ; 
HIHJ. t .1 1 I I - 1-"4 ■■ 

H 1 IKKF 1 K 1 .I) 

I I I'Y III Mil. i i ll.t. t» 
i:iii ii a ruiN iit i'AH iHi.Ni 

I 111 III I'AKK M ll""l 
II . 1 !' II *. I a'V Riailil. ■**'» <i*V( 

Ra'ili, Ill'll Ini' Sa-till-iulirl . 
1 * 1112 . ,1 li'iialii'r ail III-iIiiiv 

alllla, III 1 Hill' vvltli III!' ill— 
milisil-* !>■' *n 11 mall t'aaillla II III"' 
ta i I'Y I'nila-i I. Xialll- I. 

A|i|il|i is 1 1 ■ all lalllllv mill 

llll'llll'l- lla'lallll* lira* .IV II llllllla* 

II I, ill (III' Ul ia.lli'.ia Hi‘l' laa 

vv hum Llii't hIiiiiiIiI Im ri<- 
t il mi'll within 2 vvi-rki ul III" 
■il)|i i'ii ru ii 1 **' ul IMi ‘Ulv'-rt Mi- 
HifiU. tatlMJ I 1.12 It 22 

HI 1 KFFIKIJ) 

city (ik Ktit:i i-'ii'.i.ii 

EDUCATION OKI’ ART M ENT 
WALT II EOF .SCHOOL 

S laauitiunt Clusn, SlK'lflald. HJ 

|IY 

l mi ■■In'll fur Ha'iiloinlinr. 

IIIICJ. al ll'lll lli'l* Ul II I V I * i|' V ( 

I |l III l-.ll .Si .ill* I + SIS'. 

Aiaialia all lull lul IliH • 111*1 

I urllia'r ali't.lll-a alii' HV iiIIiiIiIm 

I ■ nan ilia- llat.ial I 1 Hi 

wlltuil tlia’V ■vliiiulil !•■■ 1 ai- 

llll'lll'll W 1 1 ll I ll 2 VVI'l'kH Ul Ilia' 
■ I I alai' Ill'll ll!'!' ul tlllH Ildvairliaal'- 

III. i.lllfiOOi 1 .121122 


WAUWICKSHIRE 

SOUTH am fiction L 
Welsh Ruail. Suutham, 
Lnainlnntoq Spa, CV 33 
OJW 

( 12-18 rcmiprnhansiva. 
1,140 un mill 

Required Unptanibar, 
1 QB 2 : 1 . Tnochnr uf His- 

tory and Ooonrnpliy. 2 . 
Tearhcr of lilsiury and 
Ecannmlcs. 


AnpMi'otlun form and 
furthur details from the 
Head at tha srliool (BAR 

J Inane). Clanlnq iliiln 7 th 
unit, 1082 . ( 30200 ) 


Scale 1 to work In a davelnu- 
Ina d.apar tmont. Tha tlmatable 
involves thn toarhrna of His- 
tory over tlto rantip 11-16 
leacllnn to 'O' und C. 8 .E. at 
prnxont nml llknly to daiVL'top 
In diver thn 16 
examination. Tim tn-linul | B 
ilovnliiplnn Un inn of the 

Mchunls II IllNtui'v I’m- 

Jnet. Kinii ii tenrlllliq lliuv tin 
■■(.'(in tin" In nmitlier aiihlert 
■iriiu null nnvIli’aiiiiN nlimilil in- 
priiNH tlmlr prii f ereiiro . 

' A It |i] lent, la ul forum alltal 

fiirlliair ili< lul In urn uvullailaln 


WILTSHIRE 

CASTLEDOWN SCHOOL 
Luilnarshull. Nr Andovar. 
Hants 

Tnl : Andover 7907 7 B 
til • 16 ComDrehousIva 
School a roup 10 ) 

For Baptombar. 1982 . A 
toachor of History tSrnln 1 ) to 
teach this subjnet In all rivo 
years of tills 11-16 mixed 
school. 

Further datalls ami forms 
of appllcutlon from tho liiiad- 
mnstnr at tlm Brliool. Fleasa 

sgoStypar ( 3 t B n 24 o < ^ ,, -“isaiisa 

WILTSHIRE 

HOUTJ^iVll.Tfl CIKAMMAK 

Sater.s - Hlxtli Form 21 o 
RnOlilred Kir koptlimbnr 1 1182 
a puuil Honours nrailtutte In 
Hlatory' lo Shura the work of 
Ilia department tn Advanced 


History' tu shura the work of 
[fie department tn Advanced 
love I und Us hr l iltio Eiiirance 

n tandaril . Srlinlnrahlp mid 

vnly., iiipdorn annroucli 
nesantlal • The suciuinnful np- 
pliamit will lie wxoertqd tu 
cnntributn tn oxlru- turrirulur 
autjvltlea inid to hnvu iiaisturUI 
rosponsllillltv. 

Letters of appllrulloii lito 
forms) to Ilia linudiiilstress 
wflti full daislls uf tiiibrifli'a- 
tlone. (ispurtennn. Internets 
and Ilia immoN uf two ru* 
fnruns. H.A.E., 1 J ii tu lie will 


Home Economies 
Heads of Department 

ENFIKLl) 

jOnuon iicmoiujii or 

VINrilMtHlK KCJIOOL 

.slmrnum Or aye. Winniimore 

mi/ hfiir ,, ‘ Ma ' aWs 


I land «jr Home Lnuimmlos - 
Hcala 3 

Raqulrnd Baptunibnr. nr us 
noun ns pusulble Ihcronfter. 
nn oxnnrlancud. taueftur to 
take utiarno or Kanin Ecuiiq- 
inlce. Tho dnnartmom has 
tllrno well aqulpnnd rooms, 
Thorn aro astubiished courses 
laaulna to C.BaB.. ‘O' nnd ‘A’.- 
lovnl exarnlnutlpns. An ability 
to teQDh Child no voloamem 
nnd or TaxtHas Is, donlrnbie. 

_ London . Allowanoe £ 408 . 
Constdersllon Qlyun to assist- 
unto wTth rump val, falocutlon 
costs, temporary liouslno and 
two homes allowance. 

Application rurina and do. 
tails (foolscap s.s.e.) Obtaln- 
ablo from tha Haadtaachsr, to 

SL'WHVA “' ■ 00 ” *MfSVi 

— — ... 4 . ■ ... 

WALTHAM FOREST '! 

LONDON BOROUGH OF 


raseuoh 

and bbVd»cBd:'by Bftplnii 
'Forut;. London Addition to 

^l^th^MO^MUIoii Ell 
ttuud Tauahapi Dr. a.M. 

ECoScSrfI« * 

required lh this ■ Comprehen- 

wwSr r * 


UNITY., 

h e#sy • 
jnaon 

Hon to . 


.- busllfloiRlorte end experience, togstner wranne names anq 
eSdretaqa of IW q referees. : ■ .• 

(^mpletodappNoatlorilormeandhrtteriibtapplWWfbn 
V ^hcHJld beaubmWed direct tolhe HsedTaaotwe by not later 
dhan4lh June 1962. - 1 - "■ 


Scale 2 Posts and above 


ltAUKINti 

I IINI'I'N lit 1 11 ( 11' 1 1 11 til 
1 IAKK 1 NI. -\Ntl I ■ \ I , I Nil AM 
IV MIR 1 N VOMI’III III N'-IVl 
-t'lllllll. I Rut I I mm 
IVliilla'tiillU' 1 ..Ilia* Na>a III. 

< li.i.lvvi-ll lla allla Hiiliiliii .1 
1 1 ■* a| II I l-a'a 1 liar Si'|»li'l,llaa | 1 * 111 .! 

ill'AI) M I Ul 1 WORK • 1 
■vliltiililv >| a ■ ■! 1 1 1 < a- a I . 111,1 a't|,arl 
■•lla i'll ll'lll lU-r t,a laa III- .til I'l 
Na-rilll'V'Ulk III llllt 1 I - lit 
initial a 1 1 111 I ■ I •■lli-ll-lv •• ■», lliiaal 

III ill'V* a*lai|. III,- vv la I >* I ii'lH'i l« 
a,l Ilia- -.III a la* ■ t al ill I I,' hlli*- 

■II' .ill' II vvltli Art A I ll*', lain 
■u air ;! . 

1 umla'll Ailillllnli I 7 r i*l |> >i 

Ka lllllilirNi'iila ut ai| I'a'iii. ,v ill 

■ •K|M'll*a,'S III IIIIIII aava'il a ' 111 ' v 

Al>|llli altl'lll Im Ill'a tiv ■lll.ihli' 

<i*iiiii Ilia- II II lli'l* I* iv t* a 

■*<■ luriiiihla 1 lay .Ii luiia*. 1 'iiiJ. 
t. ISP 1.1 1 _ I llll.'ll 

ltllADKOHIl 

CITY Ilf lilt AIII mill 

Mi: ntoi'i ii.itan c«ii'Ni:il. 

IIIIII.I IOIIA l». m 

i*:ntK:A ntiN ai. m'.hvu i ►. 

TONG IM'I'I.U Hi:»ll II >1 

I I f-t| 11 1 1 'l'tl fill* ‘ll'lila’llllll-l . 
1 'IH 2 . II Wi'll iin.il II | i '|1 la-nalli'r 
am hPi-UIKl III till- Manila* l.ii,l|aa> 

mlai Da’iiai'tini'iit. **■ nlr 2 . lul 
this 1 . 1 * 1 II mltt'il Cmiiiih "In'ii ■ 
nlvi' hi hunt With 14.111 lull'll'" 
nil rull t 1 fill In vldli fail mi. 
The dnltnrtini'iit olli-rn n vi-rv 
vvlllr riaiuiai u| af'lir'ia**' .dial 111 " 

I .i I ■ I •- 

V ■■■■■•alt Mil V illlll <!■■» 11,1111 v . 

A|i|alli III lain laii'llii ll lla I 

Inrthi'l* all - 1 III 1 *» III* 

a ll * I ll I Ill'll ts.ll.a*. |l 1 ■ l .l*aa a I IIIIIII 

till' lli'ii!lmit-ala*r. ruihl I 'i'l'«"i 
Si'llilul. Wi-Majiltn lltil, llriial' 
(■■ril. 111)4 AN|(. la, vv hum 

■ umpli'IIMl for in at mIiiiiiIiI In* I'a** 
turn nil lay 7 ||| Jmia«. I ‘III 2 
Half. ET. . 16782/1 Es. <. 1512611 ) 


BROMLEY 

LONDON Itonoiic'.ll UF 
BROMLEY 

LANGLEY PARK UCIiOOL 
FOR Ol R LS 
fiouth Eden Purk Ruail. 
llvckenlium. Kunt. nil 3 3 UE. 
Tel: 01-630 7207 . 

All ability 1 1.10 mi roll - 2 nn 
Ulrls In Joint filxth Fitrm. 

Applications arc Invited lor 
the rnlluwlnq puals:- 

Bruln 2 Pnst ill rhnruc uf 
Child Care and llnalili nimn* 
tloii. 

firnle I Pusl tu tnncli IIicsp 
subjects. Ability tu leui Ii 
noma tloinc Ktnimnilix re- 
■ tulrail fur Imtli pusis. 

Child Cure lllld Ili-velaiM- 
ntimt Is u pnpulnr C.B.I 1 .. 
cuuno In ttie fourth uml llflli 
year. Health Film-ntlim is ■■ 
rampanani of ilin i.iimimlsurv 
corn curriculum In the fourth 
and fifth ynars. 

Letters of applla-ullim tu 
thp Headmlstrnan as the 
School us soon as ponnlblu In* 
cludlnu full c.v. , name" and 
addresses uf two reform*. 
Please stntn fur which pout 
tha appltrotipn is mmla fn.n.c. 
plaaseL ( 39294 ) 1.13020 


ESSEX 

(ill A YH c: 

.SCHOOL 

srth- A 


CONVENT 111(111 
Avenue, (lenv* IIMI 1 


» 76173 

fl.lllrls) 


COUNTY ^ .... ... 

BDIJCATION IIEP AKIM I NT 
OTljj.lNCIliAM DIVIHIDN . 
ypnilUY. MANUK UCIUMII. 
Tnui tier lioeiiimMlhtii fur 
Neoillewiirk iMt-iilr 2 ) 

An mipnrlriH'nil io,ii* lii'v re- 
uuirad fair Hrptiinihri', I'.llin. 
tlf piisnibln) nr .lmtuairV. tu 

R rcnut HiisiiuiisniHIty fur 

InetJlewiirk, Nculn U, Willi Ml 
the I f ii mu l.iiiiumili'ai Deum-ta 


COlINril. 

ON IIEI'AKTMI NT 
JAM DIVIHIDN . 


Scale 1 Posts 


AVON 

MUf 9 teacher 
quireu < for fieptembpr. 
work oovsrs (lip aim und 
ily rsiipq to c.fi.o. oik 
levols. Interest jn, mid u 


I 1 KIIKNI 1 IKI': 


1 

Kill 

» IIS 

I 1 

Kll 1 r 



■ Is 

‘■|. r 8 "1 

N 

ll l< 

1 .%',■■ 

1 11 

.!«■ .1 



'•|« 11 l 

-.1 

1 1 

Xt -11 

1 ll ti 


HARROW 


U'-'lull a*al ’■■ Ill c ll, laa i I'lH.a 

II ll'lll II i'l III IMI la iimi 
M il ** a **■ ill,' I i N itli-a i ,a( I 

■ llaal I'.i i a ail ■ a .11 1 .a,,- ,t 1 <aii 

l.oi-lllt III t a* a v *i .an. I Mills will,. 

III Ilia- ali'ia.ll till, -ail I Vail, III, 

tlaui , aui, srs |,,a llaal.- I si . 'll* 

■lllal *A' lf*va-l «. illllllal.il a*s 

>i 1 ,ii,,|.| ll.i.i- i| sir aall'l IM.Ialli.il 


h 'ii ■iiiiiiI 

( ■lilla .III' >11 
11*1 ata* I nils fa 
sli'i I «.u • lira 

!'• aillla II t'i .III 
■ II V l llll'lilV a*l 


f.a, aais .uni 
"III tl ,, 1 lli-.iit - 
kslilr, I'alllll- 
a'allnl | li,a|n. a . 

1 1**. 1 im 

1.111122 


llltOMI.KY 

tiiMiiirv lit ■ miiim . it id 
inn imi i \ 

I \NI ■ I I V I'MIK 'II IIIIIII 
I Mil I . 1 1 1 1 S 
Hi*. U"iili.u,i . Ki-ui 
lei III .(.111 1211 a' 

Alll'tll lulls alia' lltvlla-al liar 

III" lilllaavv lllal |a,l-i<*a . S|'.\| | 

V. laa l.tl. ■■ a tarii nr ■■( a lallfl 

filla' nil') I |a"tll la I i In, ,i I lam . 
si .\ | 1 '. | I", isl f , a I, -.it |a ||„'.p 

Slilala-a | a. AlallllV III I ■•■I, It 

sauna- liana,. ■ laaulainHas ra-- 

■ llllla'al liar iMalll |aaasts 

I nil ali-l.llln .im llslral u ll ■ 1 I* 
tl.MII'-slla Sllli|a>ils. S, nla< '.i 


mU'KINClIAMHUIUK 
i ul IN I Y I MUNI II. 

WING ( lil'NIV *• 1 . 1*1 IN 11 AR Y 

*■( 'lit ■( >i 

-\v I*' 1 * lllal V It, Mlai . 11 lli'l. 

I "llllil, in II, ■(/•nil. Heals 

I I "ilat I Pall lira' t, I I ■ I ■ 1 a - 1 1 
Niuiiliri ana raall 'alMI 

ii.Ai lli ii m Ni.riu nviiiiK 
< M/I i *». nlr t 

Rr'IUlrral *•■•■■1 a'lnlar I rmalin 
lai In- ra<n|ia uisllili' fail Nt-a'illa'- 
work I lil'riiUlhaitll Ilia* silioul. 

A |a|i| v allrra 1 t a • I |r laaltai.isl ,*| 
■llvlmi ■ lirrla iiIiiiii vll , ip final 
Uilines >il two ra*fa*ra*a*s. Pli'aisa* 
St, III' utlli'l suta (a-i t < s 1 ailli-ra'il 

Anslstitna a* with I'Pllluv.il p*- 
|iaallna*n Is ailYa-ai III ii|ajaruvl'il 
a , isrn. 1 . 18 . 1 . 1*11 ( 3 . 1 U 22 


TEA ClllUi f il 1 '' jlOMI'. 
ECONUMICH/NEEDf.F.WORK 
hi ole 2 . iiIum l.uiidun 
Alluwnmin. 

Tu *11 • level anal C.H.L.re- 
nutrnu. for Sontembm' lena. 

Appllimiluita vviili rurrinu- 
him. vitun tn lleuiliiilali-n** 
t todlutni’ s.u.e. nlnatir). 
< 3904.11 1.131120 


BERKSHIRE 

MEAD WAY BC 
Tha Maud way, 




BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 

)iKAf:<)Nhru:i.i>/<:itiLTi:i(N 

DIVISION 

111 > 11 N II Akl COUNTY 
SKCDNDAIIY SCIKIIil. 
UltPltdnlr Ruitil. fliu illiiim. 
Sltniiih SI. I 11 ./. 

Ilrail. Mrrvvn EiIpii. HA. 
M.Mill 

Nil. mi rull 6 J 6 mlii'il <12 ■ 
III 

lli'iinif i'll fan Hi'pt ,*i, ilier. 
1 *IH 2 . ten* Her ul lliuiu- I'.i inm* 
nil. q A Nr ilalli'W an k tu Htiairc 
ill Dir tuna lit mi ■■( llii'ii* a*ll la - 
Ilia Is lu 'll' Irvrli <111 liila'Ia'St 
In lla* VV ala-vnloiMiu'lit W II Mill n 
t mall I luilitl I Imi - 1 iilili* would 

lap linrlli Ili.iUuU 

In nutria -a nrr la ill'll* atillvllla"* 

Is VIllllPlI (iiiual fail IIHII'S fair 

bailli milila-i ts. < 3 ( 126.11 1 . 13(124 

DEVON 

plossi* see dlsulnyril advertise- 
mnnt un pu«n 53 . MflflWi 


ESSEX 

JiotuMu-.nFNBtvi: scuuui. 

(Hull HHO) 


huiillie ru Wav. Ilarliivv. « M I H 

TrlV llnl liaw . 151211 1 / 2 / 3 . 

Itdkll: EI.UNIIMK '•/, 
NI'EDl.CCIIAl T hl'Al.l. I. 
llPflillred hriilPliltaei'. laa li**U )i 

tu C.H.I.. 'O' lev *• I l»V. 1 ll- 

I lllinlaiait |a reua ha-» I a*a|illi eal Ifi 
pin fliiiirlslilnu ilnptii- tniMit . 
Cui'rll'llllllll vltsr alllai II M liul » 


ul two 

lanirlirr 

lilrnsni 


referee* tu 

I fulllaa all 1 


Tlln Depart inelit ham event ■ 
Hint rni.llldn* mill e|ii|>li 4 *l* 16 

1 'luinil ant TevuleN unit 

■aehloti Dniilyn. vvltli I'umee'i 

I anilimi tu f:.M. |:. anal ■< > • 
nve| iixiiiiiihntianm. 

imply tiv inner of npiilhn- 
(lull tu Mr, J. (!. Kuwlititd, 
M, A. . II tin dm it si i'l*. UplMii y 
Mniiur nrliiiid. MurHuu'iiiiiifi 

MwavMvV» 4 n H ; ,,t - 

1 . 1302(1 


111 ( 1 . i:l(l< AY sellout 
( lltil j I nril) Mnln failuiul. 

260 + sislli f unit I 
Si IiiiiiI lluntl. Illllnila aiv 
Tel- UJ 7 I 4 351*11 
HOME I.CONUMIhr nlr I. 
r !,'lii>laiil I I'lillle Allow iliu a* 
£213 

Sai|ileilt 1 ier. Mlx"il hilluail. 

Ten i her fur wank up »•• 
C.H.I:. * 11 ' null 'A' li*v>'l I iiaut 
mill Nuirltllili. fipea tail Inf allaaai 
ItflerlllU V Illlll I )rvi-lii|iiit(>llt 
mill I ii lull * mi i»«l viuttitup . 

( 'urr l< nimn vital" unit 
linilO'n. aullll ea*U'* aiml lelr- 

U liiiiir iilimliPI* «if iPlPiea** In 
"till I Oil ill" I lluallna a||a ■•ai.e 

tdeatsei. l.l'ld 7 * 1 1 13 . 111,12 


GWENT 

( (iliNTY l.llllNI II. 

I.I.AN I Alt NAM 
(TIMI'ltlll NslVf sellout. 

C -VV Illlll III! 


(■vv mh i am 

III - fill 


I IOMI. I.CONflMK 
llaOlUREII inti I ni fin|at •• m - 
■er I 'IIIM. Apulia it! lull* nrn lii- 
Vlleil Hum ■lllllllf ll'll tl'all llaal '* 1 
f fir lliii failluw lnu viii itiia'ies: - 
'I earner Irum n siun laillHt 
Ihllneellti Hllelue € Iil|ea|a* til 
tenrh inntnlv Neeillewurl* atitil 

F uinn Art. Aptilh'niiun 

urins mid liirlhrr ihluriiiutlaui 
where uynllabte. ulitnlimlile 
frnm the Dti'nittii' ul I'.durn- 
tliin, Citiiiitv Hull. «. wnliriin. 
liwent, NF 44 fXII tin rea eitii 


mini the 1 lil'na till' III I'.fllirn- 
llun, Citiiiitv Hull. «. wnliriin. 
liwent, NF 44 fXtl tin rea ei|«l 
ul it. u.u, . shuillai lie riatiirueil 
tu (he lieitillliastfar hv Iliu 4 th 
June I HB 2 . 1383361 1.13022 


ily raiioo to c.ft.B. and •O* 
lavafs. Interest in, mid ul>l Illy 
to teach, Chllu Care and 
llama _ Economics would ba 
advnntaaoaus (Scaln, fi. 

Please apply to Ifaadmastor 
Blvina curriculum vltao, In- 


with soma Jfome Economics. 
J™. past , - involves taochlna 
across. tha full aoo. snd ability 
ranaa' ;of this 1 1-1 a nilxad 
comprehensive school In an 
Rltt^SHya and wail-estsb- 


HILLINQUON 
LONDON llOHOtirill Of' 

Hit. LINO DON 

1IARLINOTUN SCHOOL 

naiasTivJi” v Jh aa'Tifa" ■ , 

INumbnr mi roll 1009 . 01 
In fitxtli Form) 

Required for Auluinii 

V) wltli un Interest . In 
Parentorsfi. yarancy.^ duo 

S o Maternity l.nhvo. Outer 
■ ohdan ANuwanca Puy- 


. "apartment ■ 


or data 

Fo.Haai 


HAMPSHIRE - 

y^R ^§^“ 4 . CarapntlwnBlvd*. 

Cji°n | s ' including. Noodle- 




slnstle ieieffi- •£! 

r.riinoinics <mBlo/ramfi r 

wsi-a 1 

ByBgffpljBfc 

ft.r^W ,r,Il {S n t. lll ror «» Ud 

••tduine.t fVunT ihe 

&., - "ft 

'T i.'iishleraiE Wmm’L f 1 " 

rvii'.wv,' m 


havering 

iiAV.?l*T N K OKOUC HOF 

■»l‘!!ft ,l,,,1 " : , l° rnr hurch 
HejRearhrri A . Wundirl,. 

Iliiine Kriiiiunilrs, Scale t ^ 
•mlreii taepteniber. it|> 
imu Hirers nn oacltlna oBoS 

W" , ‘k V .,r, , t I U n 1 0 r W eTl D « q l °[ ^ 

l;!s:a t hrr:£ t , ; i l 

aui ' ntSvli iituan . -nd -*» 

shuubY m* son! ta 
leu, her (living full currlcukS 
vitiiai and quot Inn two ra. 
(•fees . closing dele: T° dpi 
after Jhe appeerance of iMi 
udvertlsement. < 39060 ) 

133612 


HILLINGDON 

LONDON BOROUGH Of 
KILLINODON 

TOWN HELII SCHOOL 

Onirsl Avenue, Hayn, 

M Iclal laaaaux UB 3 BDD 

(Number on roll 10 SB. It 
In Klxth Form) 

The Hi. haul will Mu 
Iwu vacunclea In ta* 
HOME ECONOMIC 8 D»- 
nartment In September. 
1082 . Fuat 1 la permanent. 
Paint 2 I* tn raver materni- 
ty leave. 

Iluth iiutit are Srali 1 . 

Post I. Tlio BUtCOIlllJ 
' o n,l Id'll*' will be i MPiiliJ 
In lein li liuniaa Etonon rt 
tin a null, amt yours 1*3 wlO 
lire I nips niuiie CUE Parantj 
» raift . 

Pus I 2 . The NUtceulul 
I , miMal.it.' will be •jpotiwl • 
Iti lean h mainly No'din- 
wank, with sontt Hmn 

nn Ira. tli rau ihovr 

veers 1 - 5 . 

Older l.uildoii Allowanc* 


I el fle|»ti'li|. 


Appllf ill lull* nri' lll- 
I ritinllllnit I I'airliaai '* 1 


tssm 


ill asuiianitn fur tutn- 






{.;,.*■• i- 


Ollier I.UIIUIIII nllDwam, 

I’aivauln. 

pinnae apply In the hr" 


iv;.v.v , :.v .fe »jiS 

lh title* uml oddre* 1 ** « 

iwu mfnrana. < 392 "\a 4 t)jj 


Parentorsfi. ygi-ancy.^ dt 

S o Msternlty I.ahvo. Out. 
■ ohdan Aliuwanuo P»: 
able. 


KENT 

CKANUROOK SCHOOL. 

Kequh'Bd . fur • SspiambBr. 
1082 an Assistant Teacher ail 
flame Bcanpittlra end NeoUie- 
work In tfils coerliicatlpnal. 
Voluntary ’ . Aided. . ypijii/ 


KENT 

pnkr 

DHtl H . 

Iiuii 1.161) i..viiBd- fruo 

A faint* BM ’..'"Xiill quil; 

eaiierli'in ril u"" ol 

■ I leal learners tnr J •’.".’’J .pi- 

iss "feii'iiWsi 3 r*P 

a.'huul W lll, ™ 1 VplMi|Urt w «K“ 

lit Idi lit 'ill' ’“-■ |U Hoadnil"^' 

S.. 


KIRKLKKH ,.„ fll icn; ' ' 

Pl’l i:.)n.proli*>“ ,, *l ,; 
1 . 4.60 p.ipllf* 

Th!/ <n » n i U K°o c r «* al ‘ 
sfinrea a M Pef." rte . 
sisllf 1 'TJ?J;,nranold. oflf 

f lo Wf' n t r rioNoAfs^Sjir 

r„* S 


work fur 


snabMS 

USSSSSL-Sf 


kirkleeb 


Ornfcnnd D«^ n P sngj £h l l * B V 

Sf.fTn'terSSt , . 

Child cars will v ^ 


i 


XHE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 2I.S.82 


ggC HOME ECONOMICS 

raintlnued 

NORFOLK 

° T - va s b c M h^ T l H M,0,, 

Mo. on Roll: I I 40 — 12-16 

Required for Be|»tembor. 
ims Scale 1 Ti'iu'Jier uf 
Horn" Eeonomlcs tu Join n 
Department of 3 *»• *he 

,.a rhino Of umv Eaaini*- 

fflS. Texllluu «»•> Chilli 

Dayelopmont. 

Details and uniiMriit lain 
lormi from Iliu llouilmn*- 
Sr al thn B.houl am r.a. 
i.lal of e.s.e. uml ahiiiilal 
5 .. reiurnoil lu the mime 

iSuraii >■ "aaaua ■ i aatma 

NORFOLK 

WAY LAN n HIGH SCIIUOI. 
Martoa Hond. WiUtun. IP 25 

si B o r aaa 

Timbornry teadier ul NnetMe- 
work/Homc EcunniulrH ru- 
bulrsd rrom Sopt ember. 1)182 
io rover b parlud ul muternlly 
!••«« <wllh a poasllillllv of 

'"ApStlcatfon (urins (lltil 
(uriner details an ri:< uliil of u 
roalirtP. Stamped nilili-iaased 
anvalope from the lleiul- 
iSacher at the Scliu.il. C 3 H.Y> 7 | 

NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

CORBY OUR LADY St 
POPE JOHN XXlil IIC 
SCHOOL 

Tawar Hill fluad. Corby. 
Northanis. NN I H 0 T) 

Itaqulred for Saplninber, 
1989 . Teacher of Homo 
Economic* — temporary 
■ ppolntment initially for 
oaa tar in. 

Further detalln and ap- 
plication form avallnblt- 
from tha Headmovtor iSAE 
plena). < 38907 ) 133022 

OLDHAM 

METROPOLITAN DOItOl'GH 
Of OLDHAM 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
FITTON HILL SCHOOL 
Roiiry Road, Oldham 
Raoulred for buntembur, 
1913 . at this 11-16 mixed 
Conprehonalvft Hihnol uf ab- 
oil 690 pupil*, Sa ah* I 
tticher of Home Ecunumli'*. 
facial Priority Alliiwunru 


wed a.a.o. for unpltiattun 
form to the Hnatl at thn 
SclMJal, returnable to lilni Im- 
eadlataly. I 3 SB 42 I 133022 

OXFORDSHIRE 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
tYALLINOFonn SCHOOL 
Sh'lan Road. Walliniiluril. 

f |n*tlli?li 

MICS . (S cale 1 ) tu ti'iirli 


1 R jpJjMh Kurm 

Required fo r Hnplmnbnr n 

ufre Br ««»>* B ECONO. 

••‘•-urttii'iuinn- 
tiJffl gyjwtlSlvn sell un I. The 
SSJJJ "*" 1 _hux entaibllaliml 
l!Si. C*h;E.. O and A 
* n “ each muinliiT hu* 


*a< h nul ■ 


h wn room m,,,n,,rr ,,u-4 

"I RPPltrnt lun . with 

firii.” trf’Vu. iwti r«- 
fhaai whl?.. ,he Hopilinncher, 
tuSih^ "h^ moro .>>>'(••111 nn) 

ggjr by *° ,,tlln ‘ l ,^22 

RIOIIMOND UPON 
THAMES 

,|am 8 na 1 fl 0 T. ,m,r “ 

HB?^ U i r 0 i'i Nai'lamllT, 

PVVLn! " Hi 1 l, \ u "« 

B aa inau i ....* L“ ri, l" r " ax 
,a rSf.Si'J ' 1 ! l i fftiieihit- 
1 l^ffeqtFlM* 6,, “ 

touKlne f-*,!?,,.. earn Hun i 

VU;.!.* 

vstr '"»* * Hfitesd 


^PTON * 

SS?A lTAN whohchi' 
HPVBNNiDiF 


. f Sr u, n a?. 

ferffr'Seteli, ' forma and 

®rn available 

^ r K{" 

4 th i 3 im 

$nw£5~— 


^YQp^ul^^TMnNT 
Sh^Heid. 86 

j&Api 1 . Bomo N,,8d - 

hy letter, h| V - 
training. 

?S , .T^.vynh ,,n ?v... ,n 


M . . 8 n*fciiHd. MB 


H 11 EFFIELD 

S 30 SAtl"" Mua "* S half laid, 

an 11-18 Sue. 

Itnilillreal [ n r 

.■..".iia'i;-.? M- f ,- 

Ail pi | mi | U n rnrnm 

Uiriioil within 2 vveok* or lEZ 
npuimrnnrn ol Uita 
innnt, < 38 Y 2 »; 

SHEFFIELD 

SjmX: Sfi^ l %Ktiff TkCBMT 

: : lOlINKIUlKiE SC OOL NT 
JTjjarnhridne Avenfio, OL 
Mu-fl eld. fiia 3 All 

iiiniitly Houaiia raft with .n°mS 

■ ■ anil In work. Ifowvoc^ft" 0 ^ 

A- W . 1 Rework to 
I Mart 111 flTl'tia M* Glr|*GlSia? 0 D 0 

’•Mst*' 

m ,r ih" U, &'^r. ar y ' “vatl.bi 2 
wh'iln U li,ey Hf ’ a “ 1 ? rlu Tr c {, l “ r r i°. 
Inriind wllliln 2 wooks of thn 
nuita-ni'ance of this ail vsriiaST 
iiiont. < 38329 ? laa oaa 

H1IEPFIKLD 

sia aqfi H Huc " 1, Shftff i«w. 

'Ml 1 1-1 ft hoc. 

ffisaPi-wste 

ftsa i'iK-'f'sii.H a 
SSSK 7 JfS,yf ,hla 

WALTHAM FORE 8 T 

WaSBaJWBBF OF 

An equal opportunity 
amployiar. 

'* within easy 

roach of Central London and 
burdernd by Epptng Forest 
pewftd? Addition to salary 

nfr,hV r £Ji‘?. KT “'pM SCHOOL 
l|“n h *1 London, E 4 

llnnd leOLlier: Mr L. A. 

Honiitnr 

/a,ft“'L EI \ OF FOOD STU- 

■ •ith Stulo I (n ihlt mlifffi 

cuninrntiAiiaivo achool fo? 
puplla uped 11.(4 years fflTo 

SS-tERSf 1 ' ln nU ‘ 7 97 C B r 0 ,l le Wh t I {;S 
fl«, rpo a ui, i 


ECONO. ft 83 IMP. 

I tiiucli 1394.161 


r, '! , ,* <, ' ,r a , a , "9 In tho 

rr A~ U aa Dexltin Onpuriment. 

, Applli-iitlan, forma and 
further detail, available from 

HBilg. """ *'" J “”'.. 1 .Ya 

WARWICKSHIRE 

SOUTIIAM SCHOOL 
IVelxh it land. Southern. 
Lneuiluntaii^pa. CviS 

( 12- 1 H I'oihnroliianxive. 
1,140 on mill 

inL , « ,,,,lri " 1 Bnptombor. 
1982 . teiuiiorory teacher 
■if lliinia, Hcoiiimilce tci re- 
nliiiia nininbor nf stair on 
■iiie.ymii' xnriiniliiiniit. 

Apiilli'uiiuii iurm and 
fui'lhni' detail* Truni the . 
Ilnnil at llin xrlinnl (SAB ' 
plfinxo ). I : lam Inu iluti' 7 th 
liinn. 11 ) 112 . I 3 B 20 R) 

133022 

WILTSHIRE 

MALINIHIKY HT JOHHFII'B IIC 
I. 10 U mixed) 

lor Hepit, mlinr 1982 . Tench or 
U» he snlrly rnsixiitailile for 
11111111 , I.:* mu miiIi's mid Nopdln- 
Wairli ihi'iiuuhuut the xeliuol. 
Mitilnrn . tail Jltllllfi lit plnDXDnl 
xiirruiimllihix. Wnll-ixiulnund 
iflnft I'Oailun. Ha-Ole 1 . (Hiifllo 0 
rur nuitnlilv aninlirind und ox- 
|IPI'lelli:ni| raindllliUli), 

heiiil n.n.n lu llin Jliiadnins- 
t"f I or tiii'llinr ititrilriilnrn and 

n i mi li u I la i ii form. ( 4 al 38 B) 

1.13023 

WII.THHIRli 

KINOKDOWN SCHOOL 
HI r OK im hi Mnriiorot nnnr ■ 

Mixnit'Tl - 18 i qiiipruhoiixiyp 
niitimil with 10110 pupil* (180 
in llin six ill form) nnd ast in a 
dnliiilitfiil urua with nqsy , 
nri'ea* In the Cutnwolds, tho 
Marlliorminh Down* nnd tho 
(/Ulinr Tliuiiini. 

J^«uihnaxtpr: J H knmp MAA., 

npoiilreil from HputpMbar 
1 . 082 . Tana-hnr of NUEDLEC- 
IIAI'T He, tie I with tlta ability 
to tnnrli IIOMI. ECONOMICS 
thrmiuhout ilia xcliool. 

Tho Autliorlty lias s so hi* mo 
to UNsIst with ronioval ax- 

[ leiiane nml. ff nncessary, s 
adainu ullowance. 


lodaitiu ullowance. 

^ ADpTluatlon lane losing «se> 
by {Attar to tlio liondmaster at 
thn Hcliool as soon ss possible 
stntlna aadi'oxa, telephone 
number, age. qualifications, 
nxiiur fence c including nsraos, 
types and sixes of the 
schools). Interests, and 
address and telephone number 
uf. .present or led school or 
collouo. 136472 ) 133030 


Humanities 

Scale 2 Posts and above 

CHESHIRE 

EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
cumX A i T-PillOlT BC..OOL 

(i r r,« Comp. B 7 B roll) 

SfflV.W . 1 

DEPAIITMENT HCAI.E 3 . A 
wnll-nualllinil end o;P‘"T 
e nt nd rl in flume Tnerher I* 
xuudht tu nil ns Second in 
this Ortaiirtiiiont. to esstat 
with upiiaral tonrlditg or 
Iliimnnltii's. to Inke churiie of 
Hlntury end to ilnveltip ipie- 
ii rat mi Nodal and Cornoiuhlty 
Hturilnx. Ti'uuhlna will he aj 
all II - 16 lovuTx up tu *G 
(mid tiiwiii'its 'A ) 

In the flrxt Inxiunce appttj 
liw hitter iu tlm Jlondiiilxtreaij 
1)1 villi, r iirrlL'U 


Scale 1 Posts 

DORSET 

EJKNDOWN tipper SCHnni 
13-1 s' %?*■ Wlmborne HOOL 

pwwwiF 110 ” 1 

Hoadmiitreaa: Miss M. Tilley. 

Scale ' r r d tescftVr* 1 or P 'b 19B2 * 

m& 

curdetdu m° v, toa P to" H eadinia * 1 


LEICESTERSHIRE 
° LotmAb N,TY 

0 uaft:*R b r “«,,So^ 

Laics, 

Plan 

lUunasnr 

U W flU" 

HUUMANrnn 

scale 1 — Temporary 

„ ( ,f l ” 9 ulrsd August for 1 
on, F to cover second. 
.■ teacher to join a 

owino hl, 7 “ nlll V tB S«" fol- 
lowing a mode 3 core 
course to C.H.E./'O* lawTi 
In eddltlon the post offora 
aoclology (b *a“ level and 
44 opportunity to teach 
llaa th «rk P. DB . c, “j. I . at human I- 
pr'ererence? 1 ’ " ,,M " ,ato 

u«.H rih 2 r d , ot “ll« from tho 

<»or^ ly vv,lffTu 1 | Bt p^ 

ad C d U i;S:e.*S? two m refereea 

lose). <3837 I ) 133329 


NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

I RTHL 1 NQ BOROUGH 
HUXLOW SCHOOL 
. ^ Flnedon Road. 
Irthllngboro^^^iorthenta 


ESSEX — — 

SC E H B 3oL nOUOM HI °H 
(Hoi I 300) 

Baa t B 82 A 6 V J°F| ,J *' 8 outho nd-on. 

sgiS;s!fS?j! T *, 5 Iif AT , CB 

Studios in,.™. 1 - • Computer 

ft£f ‘“if''*, h.'.k 

■"..«»'■ naVaoi'" 11 iliifi 

SHEFFIELD 

stsf .jAa r aar ■» 

BBS X Hcu'd- 

( 38537 ) bV 4th Ju "»* , 

Scale 2 Posts and above 

BRADFORD 

Required In Boptomber. 1 BB 2 
■nr.H i" 1111 ? ,r,e d and exporl- 
MMha mVtk's r tD d par tm d n t" 

widft-iSPBWi. a 


uiii. of rera a 

Th'a > 1 ® “ft!,?/ foy r ? OH> Includ- 
A -Sa * 1 ’O’ level . C 8 B. 
n.r.UH. T j?c. _ and City anil 


Mb.mV and 

PF) V.r" , ‘.VL'n n .°.if, 2 Pr° 

JHhko e major con- 
pe'rVmant. ' n * n «P“"dina do- 

b *L letter to 
SJ '9 Baiwaichgr. Tana Upper 
rn-H " (irJx VRy Hlir, Brad- 


Required for September ienlor ' officYri. 1 * 

- v ^S ,, „^ u o B, J f . , ^c^ hi**™!. iISW, Rar i 33 f a T d 


and Oqography within tha 
Humanities Faculty. WII- 
iineneas to partlcipato 
beyond a narrow aubject 
h««o. eg to toaah Social 

ssfflKusastf.sr lw: 

■ppolntmonl. ,Qn,> ‘'“ P » 

..JSWVW 15 ." eo-ediioa- 
tionol ( 11 - 18 ) comprehen- 
aivo aahool of 760 pupils 
In rural North amp ton ah (re. 

Further datelle end an- 

P lication form nvellebTa 
rom tha Headmaster iSAE 
plaaae). ( 3 BB 10 ) 133003 


OXFORDSHIRE 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
CHILTERN EDOB SCHOOL 
Reade’e Lena, Sonning 
Common, Reading R 04 SB A. 
11-16 Comprehensive 1.900 
on roll. 

ltenulrad for_ I year rrom 
September 1982 , a temporary 
toachor capable of taking 
Oaonraphy to C. 8 .E. and 
Lownr School Humanltlaa. 
Willingness to help with boys 
names would be on advantage. 
Probationary tnachora will be 
conaldared for chla poet. 

. Apply in writing to tha 
HoudEaealier as soon ae possi- 
ble- with full, curriculum vitae 
und thn nnmea end addresses 
of two __rorereBs. Q.-A.E, 
plcasn. ( 30366 ) . 133392 


BRENT 

brbnt N BOroUoh of 
iSSS»K EL1 * Y OfRLB HIGH 


^hSo K l EL1 * y g,rlb h, °» 

sarflertKiifiss., 
p.r sBivi,,*® “BiaSf! 


8 ) wllh^?o‘c 7 a^^aVon- 

for the development 

wnsTlli.A level COMFU- 

T„ ER ,h B . T V. D 'JfS . rae " nl J.L 

to the curriculum. The suc- 
cessful applicant will have 


“•■•ful applicant will have 
energy, drive and Initiative 
"™ will be expected to con- 
tribute enthualaatlcB Ily to tha 
nil round activities of n lively 

C ilrlg achDol and to work herd 
O uphold the Tilnh standards 


? n ,“ will be expected to con- 
tribute enthualaatlcB Ily to tha 
nil round actlvltlea of n lively 


?f work and behaviour 
already exlaUng. London 
Allowanoe of £ 7 SB per annum 


Application forms (8A8) 
obtainable from the Head, 
teacher returnable within fo 
days. ( 3 B 4 B 9 ) 133420 


WILTSHIRE 


BURY 

^TROPOLITAN BOROUOH 

EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
Mathematics Scale 0 
Required st Holy Cross Cal- 


MALMBBDURY SCHOOL 
HEAOMABTER: Mr J.A. 
D'Arcy 

tl • 18 Comprohentlve 


f rohenslve 
□r September, 
a toaonar to. take Eca- 
Mnice to * A* Level and sssiat 
Itli tlumenitlea teaching - in 


nil liumoniiioa loacniiii ■" mont DB DM' 
0 Lower Sohool. Economics- 


EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
Mathematics Scale 0 
Required at Holy Cross Col- 
lege. Manchester Road. Bury, 
for 1 st SaptDmbar. 1982 . to 
teach to *A* level. 

The ability to teach Statis- 
tics and modern ee wall as 
traditional Maths Is daslr- 
sfais.' 

_ Application forms snd 
furtnsr details obtalnabla 
from and raturnablo to tho 

stws. KiK'uBnr 

133420 

DEVON 

please see displayed advertise- 
ment on page as. ( 3 B 1 B 1 ) 


■new subject In this wall 

S llahaa sixth form end U»e 
er appointed will have 
considerable scope lo devalop 
the courao and contribute to 
onoral Htudfos and 8 oo|al 
duration Courses^ 


Iloadmaster, Ms 

School, Maltnaabury, 
soon as possible. Pit 
s 8, A.E. for rutthei 


g, d cNin 

Please send 


Wt Her fgjgHh. 


Mathematics 

Heads of De partment 

BRADFORD 

mixed is - 1 


•niiirid ' for September , ■ 


EAST SUSSEX 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

S EA CON SCHOOL 

aat Baech 6 a Road. 

Crowborough TN 6 2 A 8 
(Comprehbnalva mixed 11 - 

M on *Xb.r,»m l 

^^AT F i*- 0 h K..S , s! 

Person appointed will ba at* 
pectea- to teach, .over the, 
Whole sea and ability range 
.Including * A* level end to 
accept « major reaponaibllity 
Tor aoraa. aspects of the De- 
partments work which la 
besad on BMP, .. 

.Relocation grant available 

ln L«t?er Va or CS s “licet lot, . to 

|CTjjjj^“ ,oon “iffft'd 
ESSEX " “* 1 - . 7 - 

CLACTON COUNTY HlOH . . 

rRolP 1475 ) 

fil^aftoh hSlS 1 . 0 "* 0 " * 

r. o r 2 f p ?bSv t "? be £i)t u, «A;: 

appointment conaldared. Seals' 

3 for porsoneble. to develop. 
Computer Education In (he 
school. t .• ' 

Apply, Immediately hv lettsr 
ta tne Head teacher, with c.v. 
,snd names and addresses of 

x.Krr 3 « ofl,BCftP if 4 " 4 ird 


iilviiiii rurrlL'iiliini vlWn 
itniui'x. it ilili' naaMM a, id deeionn- 
tloiix.uf twu rnfnrmj*. C^xlfuj 
(Into fur jailers May BpIJ 
1982. t4hnB4l 133330 


mssp 

"E* 

adosOMte- 


ESSEX' . . 

fBSSSMg&M. 

miw*v ■' • 

Sawi-" J HariJBiSvaii* 

cent. Interest In computing 
would be an advantage. 

London Fringe. Allowance 



Lancashire^ 

County Council^ 

P 01 ** required fw 1.1 Bt^iunba, 

Secondary Schools 

a88|j2a ^f®"* 4"*^ f eitimahlslo Ihs Haadteschsr et the school. 

ST. MAHY'S R.C. HIGH 

Pnc^!Sg%rs"m d ^m) kpool(11 - 18:17Mpupl18 

SCALE 2 -CRAFT, DESIGN AND TECH NOLOGY 
BURNLEY BARDEN HIGH 

BURMLEYWALSHAWHIQH 

a«i urn ^ <Roi,!9 “ Qi ' , * ii - , »i 

^^Si,^% R s P» DEPAR ™ ENT '. 

NELSON ED 06 feNDHIGH " 

SMLE2-®huI"p.E <MIX * d Com|> - 11 * 111 - Ro, ' : 1,° 5 P) 
LANCASTER OUR LADY’S R.C. HIGH 
1 07 fl) Bmb ? Rofld ' Lancaa ‘®r* 0 1 - 1 B Mixed Comp. Roll: 
SCALE 1 -PHY 8 ICS 

Rs-advertlasmsnt "" ' ' ' ■' 1 

THORNTON C LEVEL EY 8 MILLFIELD HIGH 

u? ra Thomton Ctevelaya, Blackpool. ( 1,040 

on Roll) * ’ 

8 CALE 1 - FRENCH AND GERMAN 

!]-i C, l POOl r 3 ?- MARY 1 8 R.C. HIGH 

inilJdinSao r'o°mf ,,p001 - (1 1_18; 1 ' 70 ° pupl, “ 

SCALE 1 -RELIGIOUS EDUCATION 

LYTHAM ST. ANNES COUNTYHIGH 

WoraleyRoad, Anadell, Lytham St. Annas. ( 1,41 2 on Roll) 

8 CALE 1 - TYPING AND OFFICE SK 1 LL 8 ; 

ff “AVNE R.C. HIGH ^AIDED) 

St. Anthony a Drlva r Fulwood, Preston. ( 8 IB on Roll) 

fS 4 tEl 7 J^ TW!WA7,C ®’ COMPUTER STUDIES 
| ADVANTAGE 


FHESTQNWILUAMV^pLEC.E.HlbH 

St. Vlncenra Road, Fulwood, Preaton. ( 775 on Roll) 
8 CALE 1 - SCIENCE, PREFERABLY WITH BIOLO GY 

Walton le dal county high 

As soon aa possible 

Brlndla Road, Bambar Bridge, Preaton. ( 1,100 on Roll) 
8 CALE 1 - ENQLI 8 H 

^ ^.E LO^TOCK HALL cbllNTY HIGH 

Todd Lane North. Loetook Hall. Preaton . (801 on Roll) 

As soon Be po 88 1 bl« 

SCALE 1 - ART. 'O' LEVEL AND CSE WORK 

HB'HIHUNIIIlin 

CH 0 RLEY PARKUNDS HIGH 

Soulh port n^iChortav. ( 1 ,000 on Rolll; 1 1 -; 1 « Mixed) 

8 CALE 1 -COMPUTER STUDIES AND MATHEMATICS 


BL ACKBU R N NOTRE DAME R.C . H| G H 
Whaltay Naw Road. Blackburn. (560 on Roll; mixed 
11 — 10 ) 

TWO POSTS: 

!* ISiM 1 MATHEMATICS 

2 , SCALE 1 -MAINLY ENGLISH 

BLACKBURN PLECKG ATE HldlH 

"■SB*** Roatf « Blaokbum. ( 1 ^ 03 on Roll; mixed 1 1-1 81 

FOURPO 8 T 8 : 

F0 8 R C , A , L -^ aSI» ENQUaH AND “^EACHINQ 

2 M* S ^fiif,?S A,NLYQENERALENQLISHOR 

$ J -MAINLY REUGI 0 US EDUCATION 

tJ£&yUra^ , J?.K' r J * HYS,C8 W*™ ELECTRONICS 

1 ?+§Sm 8 NTROUEDTECHNOL ° QYTOWARD8 NEW 

For Post* 2, 3 and 4 : PLEASE STATE SUBSIDIARY 
SUBJECTS FROM FRENCH, MUSIC, METALWORK, 
WpODWOfltCDESIGN, Ge 6 gRAPHY, BOYS* PE, 
CAREER 8 l ART 

DARWEN VALE HIGH " 

Blackburn Road, Danven. ( 1^00 on Roll; mixed 11 - 1 8 ) 

23 rd August, 1982 
SCALE 1 -MUSIC 


BURNLEY ST. THEODORE'S R.C, HIGH . 

Ormarod Road, Burnley. (Rofl :706 Boya 1 1 - 1 6 ; 190 
Co-eo 16 - 18 ) 

SCALE 1 -GENERAL SCIENCE YEARS 1-4 

BURNLEY WAL^ HAW HIGH ' ' 

Eaatwn Avenue, Burnley. (Roll: » 2 G!rla 11 - 16 ) 

18 th Auguet, 1962 

TW 0 P 0 STS: 


2 . 8 CALE 1 - PHYSICAL SCIENCE-COMBINED 
SCIENCEIN LOWER SCHOOL. 80 ME PHYSICS AND/OR 
CHEMISTRY TO GSE&'O 1 LEVEL :* 

^adihUmgaWthorp^high ' 

Burnley Road, Padlham. (Roll: 770 Co-Ed 11 -fej ' 

SCALE 1 -GIRLS' PE WITH SOME SCIENCE 

SAR^OLMwifeK WEST CRAVEN HIGH 

Kelbrook Road, Barnoldawfok, Colne. (Mixed Comp. 

1 lT- 16 ; 900 onRoll) 

SCALE 1 REMEDIAL WORK 

^iMliON WALTON HIGH """" " ' 

Oxford Road, NaJeon. (Mixed Comp; 1 1 - 16 ; 903 on Roll) 
SCALE 1 -ART 


LYTHAM ST. ANNES COUNTY HlOH 

WoraleyRoad, Anadell, Lytham St. Annas. ( 1,412 on Roll) 

Late September W 82 r Early July 19 B 3 

8 CALE 1 s-TEMPORAHY POST- MATHEMATICS 


m 


I 

v. r ■ 

II ; ‘I 

e *./■:* ; 

f: 

t . 1 : 

) . 

,^7'i 

} ;:>a| 

■ IM 

V;:Vl 

i. t *.:.) 

rW' 

^ ;( 7 ; 

f ■: 


V-* 7'7 




i -■ r" ‘ . 

• 

*. * 1 ! 

1 ? • 'i’.i if 

rvis.' 

. 

1 • )ii.S ■*• . , 

: ; .jj-fij v : 

s- 7'!;7 

I ■(-«#* 

; •* 

Vis' 

7111 

■ 1 • J 

f*;i J&) 

- m 

r 1S : 

in 



•‘I I • 




l!i - 



SECONDARY MATHS 


GLOUCESTERSHIRE 

CHELTENHAM LADIES' 
COLLEGE 

An rxpcrlniired Honimi'M 
graduate In M«tluininll(*„iH 
required In Santoinbrr. 
lo touch Mutlininntlr* uu to 
and Including 3rd year. bIiIIi 
F orm University Enirnnrr 
caiididutes. 

College rtillnwa London 
Syllabus n wlilrh In u coin- 
blnailun or inoitorii nnd Irnril- 
tlcrial MullieiniUlm. Sonin 40 
ulrla will start 'A' level 
Mathematics III hopti-mbnr. 
and ii ijaud nrciportion 
theme urn nxpnctacl to tinriinii- 
Oxbridge c nmllilut un 111 l'»B4. 

In addition tilrln nro til- 
tnrntl fair Computer Muillri 
‘O’ litvol and Co mini tor Sr ion - 
CO ‘A* Invnl Four or ton tlilr- 
term irAchrrs In tlm cliipnrl- 

S unt Ibiil-Ii L'lnniintni' Ki mill's. 

poor i milt Ins for lii-iurvliv 
train inn In roiniiiillna ui'n 
aivullnblo. 

Salary will bn Itunilmni at n 
scale ami polni net acrardlini 
to llm nircmiirkil cniidliJ*Hr*« 

a uiillllvallaiiii nnd cxtirrluncr. 
n mild at os wlia lark nxprrt- 
ance or taa< lilita Further/ 
Higher Mu tlic mill Era 'A 1 Invnl 
need not apply. 

Pinnae apply In the I'rliinln- 
al. LmIIpv College. Dayelilll 
noad. Cheltenham . (Hot. 
dLno 3AZ. fllvinn full curri- 
culum vitae and names and 
AddroaiBi of two rafer nea. 
<353 lit 133430 


HARINGEY 

LONDON BOROUGH OF 
HAIUNliRV 

WOOD QUEEN MClIOOl. 

White Hart Lann. Lomlnn N2J 
OOJ. 

Pranrcsn with ifmiiniiHy 
Mixed Comprcliennlvii School 
an ana altn. 

Required for tho ucodomli 
year 1982/83 (or this 11-18 
ago ranne schaal. qual- 
ed and experienced tonclinr 
Of MATHEMATICS. SCALE 2. 

Teaching will be available 
throughout the ana range, but 
a genuine interest in haslc 
aklDs for the older pupils 
would be an advantage. 

Application lurmi and 
furlhor details available fTom 
the Headmaster to be re- 
turned to lilm aa soon aa 

passible. 

London Allowance £750 


GWENT 

COUNTV COUNCIL 
CAl.niCOT 

COM Pit C HE NS I VE HC1KUII. 
(11 • 181 
MATHEMATICS 
nEQiriur.il Fell! Ini Juimarv 
I BBS or narl li-r . 

Alt plli'ii lions urn Invited 
Crum wntllf fncf Ijmi lirr* for 
the rulliiwiiiti v in ii nlcrs : . Willi 
niinllflril it ml ■■aiturlniii eil 
taurher to br mn'iiud In l,i>- 
liarlinrnt. Realn 3 lor eiilliililn 
randlitutr. Art' Mnulun 

rurnn nnd runluir Inroriiiiitloii 
where itvallilhln. nlit nlunblr 
ri'iini tht* niri-rlur id Flint a- 
tlou. Can illy Hall. Cwnbriiil. 
(1 wn ni. HP44 2X0. on rrrnim 
of t.a.p. ah mi Id lie rrtnr uml 
tu tin< Hi‘Matnmsler liv thr -IT Is 
Jump. IflHa. I AH 3001 133422 

HAVERING 

LONDON BOROUGH OF 

havering 

THE COOPLItH' COMPANY 
ANI1 Cllllt >11 N SCIIOOt. 

(It. Mnrv'H l.iini- 

titini I nster . IhRin . Viilnntiirv 

Alilnal. A I’.K. MIxpU. 

Ficulo 2. Rni|iili-nil lor Srnti-in- 
tinr. I‘>H2. n wi-lk-diialirind 
Math (Mini 1 Ira Tniicltnr i-iipiiltl>- 
ol ti'iii'lilnii Lhn aiiUJrcl 
th Tamilian ail Him Si-linol. All 
pupils taiko Public Laniuliiii. 
tluna al tin? nnd nf ilinir l-'trili 
Ynnr. uml then one hundred 
and llilri v iiiipllt study 
M a ih nineties In Advent ml 
Lnvol. Ability lo ti'Ua'li Adv- 
anced l.nvnl Btnilstlr would br 
of particular value for thin 
appointment and a Bralo 2 
post In available for aomconn 
able to ttevolsp thin brunch of 
thn nub lout nt Sixth form 
level. Anility lo hnl|i wllli 
ipillirH In un ml » n ittnipi . 

A ppllili t L> ills with full rur ■ 
rli ilium vllart In the It mull ■lus- 
ter nil si a on ns pusnllilr ilillll - 
lug lw«i ri-fnri'Bs. Lpiirluu 
Allmvimi c £>I9H. (3UH4BI 
135420 

HEREFORD & 
WORCESTER 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

Required for September. 

1982 

BEWDLEY HIGH SCHOOL 
Stourport Road. 

Wrlbbenhsll. Bowdloy. 

Worn . D Y 1 2 I DL 


A well quollf led 

Mathematics Spcclullst 

able to tnnrh Mathematics 


Ylurlngey la an equal oppor- 
tunity omnluynr. Wo wnlcomo 
your applfcallan which will be 
consldernd an merit. Irrespec- 
tive or race, inarltnl ntutne, 
aex or any d Inability you may 
have. (434181 133420 


HARINGEY 

PROGRESS WITH 
HUMANITY 

NORTHUMBERLAND PARK 
MIXED COMPREHENSIVE 
SCHOOL 

Trulock Road. Tottenham NIT 
TnU* 01 801 009 1 

Roil 1 1 on 

Raqulrnri Tor Neptomber 19B2. 

I earhnr ol MATHEMATICS 
CALE I. or SCALE 2. for 


and Computer Science tu 
‘O’ and ‘A 1 lavnla. Tho 
uppointinant will be ntntlo 
at Scald 2. 

Applications by latter 
with full curriculum vltaa 
toaathur with thn names or 
two rnferora to tlm lleuil- 
masior . 

HEDDITCH 

ARROW VALE HIGH 
SCHOOL 

Groan Swird'Lsno, 

M atclib □rough , Redilllch, 
Wares. B9B 0BN 

Math smut ice teacher 
Scale 3. for this 13-18 Co- 
rdnrollunn I Cumpruhnnsl ye 
School (760 un roll! 


SCALE 1. or SCALE 2 for 
considerably nuallflcd anil ex- 
perienced candidate. 

Additional A I liiwuilrttH puy- 


H£ *' M 

This vat.nncv Oft an I lie nur- 
casern I iiandiduln ml upimr* 
tunlty In work In a Nucceealul 
achual where ocaduiulc sinii- 


cipannd 11*76 in purposmi 
built bulldlipjK. To teach 
■ ■mins the rull nun range 
and ability range liirliiillmi 
tho sixth rurm and tu 
uaalai In tha liavnlnihiimii 
of thin grow I in i depurt- 


tunlty In work In a Nuitmlul 
achual whern uvaduiult- stun- 
Unrds and a cnrnrully airiic- 
turnd pastoral nyatnm miioy 
high prlurlty. Tlm Hurcoaaful 
vnndlJatn will Join an nnaraa- 
tic ami coniuillied eturr. 

Tu* peranji . a pun in tad 


A pi till'd (Ion forma and 
rnrllirr did alls run lie 
olilidiind [rum thn Hoad uu 
-rnenint of a fuolarap a. a. a. 


nisnniTcii 


Hr a mv^ov;; c - 


ability to teach the full ability 
range ara aaaniitlal. A wllllno- 

R aas tu toacii Cumputlnu nnd 
a e saint with oatra-eurrlcuiar 
ucllvitlra would bn an advam 
toga. 


Auplioxtlgna 

Ino two raforanji. as anon na 
noaHlble to ilia itnudmaainr at 
the. Bcltaol. 


Ilnmavsl Emioiuoi 
allpwod In approved 


lowed In approved enana. 
Harlnuay Is an 11511 ml nppui-- 
Hilly omployor. laBOrtli 


one} ...oh _ A a rail u id o Mathamntlua 

«efclo 1/2 to join n hluldy 
«i3?. . attooBaarul dqqartmatil with 

eonraaa to University en- 
aurrlcular Fry. Bunin 40 etude 11 is will 

tn advain- study Mailinmniira next 

_ .. . ...... yam* In a sixth form «C 

lie by latter noth- about »40. Ability to aup- 

25 purl the pea I oral and sitlr- 

master at It uni sides of an R.C. 

school will bn n return* 
1 - 100% inondnlloii. 


Appllratloii roi-m and de- 
tails from Clinlrinon of 

SOTV » ,,r " 0/0 tf,u nvnb 


^ R 8 qulr«Jtorfloplomb«rlOB 2 : 

SECONDARY 

{COMPREHENSIVE) SCHOOLS 

MATHEMATICS 

SCALE 1 POSTS (5 POSTS) 

1. flint High School, Maes Hyfryd, Flint (226$) 

1 (1 1—18,1 .000 pupils) Hs8d~ A, C. Robfrta, b.8o. 

GratKiBtftprelerrod.To8harelrthBteachlngtHth9Sub|ect 
Ihroughou l tho school, In dudlng Iheposajbmly olsofna wri [riial A ; 

- level. 

2. pinna Bran 8chool, Llangollen (860669) 

■ {11-18, 1.M0 pupils) H8*d~-PwiMJonM|M. A 
To teach (hraughoul tha school up to 8ih torni level. 

3. Bryn Offa School, Wrexham (2S6776) 

: ( 11 - 18 , 1 ,3M pupl(B)HM- Mrtb KWIH^fcA. 

:Tol8achlhfciuj)hoUltliapc1^ • j 

4. Qrove Park School, VVroxharn (203044) J . * j 

■ ,(1l-1^850pupllB)H«(d^a,J.afv8h,BA , /. 

To leadhacroea lheyrtiott.ra|Toe^1age.a^ 

5. Bryn Alyn School; Qweray Wrexham (7S6469) 

(1 i-18, 1 ,050 pupue) IMil ^ 1C j. M. . . 


should Male wtipt other siOjewe) they are prep 


Pflcanla •; 
Witter, 'v 


powtele.glvlrtg full curriculum vlt8*«xl names «Vd 
nddnewolUireorefertW, -i. 

JWklWjWAhpbAVlBe: . - 
‘ DfrecfdrdfEtfMMKon : \'U.\ 




HERTKORDHH1RE 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
NORTH IlI Rlh IHVl.tltlN 

Till NO. Ill DAN .SCHOOL 
(Im-ilen Wnllt. Ituy-diin. !l"rt« 
Hull: Hfld (140 In Adi l-iirml 

I.V1B tipper Krlitml. !.«■- 
ml uni Hu mil Ciiiii|ir»lieiiHl\p 
llpiliilrml Inr .S(i|iii>niliiii-. 
10fl2. a ((ff'lliriefl anil «'*- 

( »rrli-iii eil Triii her _ ui 

-I A THEM AT 1C b. Si nlc 3. In 
liei nine Km uml In I ii'imrl - 
inrni . Cniirsi-s I'vixl ui nil 
lev nix. CSC, ‘O' nlltl "A ' 
ScIiiiuIn lina vfrv iiiiiul (ni 111 - 
ill's. liiLliidlnn in In'ti'i* inn* 
imler. 

Tli« pust iiffn-x iciialiliT. 
■dill- irmii- Inr nil ruteriirlalii'i 
ti'iiilii-r wlni In Imiiliiii ti> I'f ■ 
■'••■■in ii lleuil ol I ,v purl ini'iil 
fnlrlv miiiii. 

A mil I nil Iona In the Hr ml 
with iiirrli'ullim illn" it ml 
mimes A mltlrrnnen ol Iwii rn. 
ferrvn. 1453118, IA34'.lli 


COUNT V COUNCIL 
EllUL'A I'lUN DLEAII I'M LN I’ 
MllllWAY I ll VISION 
HOCIIChTI-.lt TIIL lll'NOUl.ll 
Oh IIIIO SCHOOL 
lino. It<n IlKHlnr. Kent 
Cu-PiliicTitliiiiul 1 .2011 puiilln 
ApiilKutlnna are luvltnil friim 
well giialtfleil loin liern fur die 
punt ni tenrlior for 

MATHEMATICS nt lliln llnimr 
c:i»ni|ireheiinlve Kvliunl. 

ci.C.E. ■!*■ and C.S.F.. luvel 
nxamlniitlfiii rlnsnen are avail- 
aula . Traditional ntaiidiiriln ur 
work anil lirhxvlunr nre nx- 
lim teil rrinn nil iiii ,• I If. Thin Is 
>1 Si nil' ’£ |>nsl 

I.MlIm i nl .1 1> ill l« ni Inn. i'iir- 

rli-iiliim uni llm iiiiiiii-s 

iiml .iilili'i'nsi'H nl 2 rnrereen In 
he Inrwiirileil tn Hie lleiiillinin- 
tnr with n.n.e lor m knnw- 
lediiPiliniil. Alttiriliillvolv. T<*l. 
Mail way 261443. 

MEDWAY DIVISION 
WILDERNESS?. SCHOOL 
faanl Hullnw Itoncl, Savennakx. 
Kent 

Group 1 1 

Required for September, 
1982. a taacher of . Mutliama- 
tles. Scale 3. to ba nocond In 
dsparimeni and rimponilblo 
(or teacHInd COMPUTER 
STUDIES. STATISTICS AND 
MATHEMATICS to ‘O' and 
‘A' level. 

The WlldernaABO School In a 
secondary school fur approx- 
imately 1.000 bays, (dtuatad 
In- 30 urroi of ploaaant rural 
area class tu Sevanuukn. 

Applications with currim- 
lum vitas and names and 
addroannn or two reieree.n In 
tlto ifoadmnater, tonother 
with 2 a.a.o.'n. 

This In a ro-aiivert Inemniit . 


HlIltOI'HlIIHK 

l.ltUf AtTMN ( UMMIII1I 
iiiHtroN iiiihiiim.ii m limn 
Amlin V A vr line. New ■■■•, I 
mil 7l»h .. , 

Hull HAH. I 1 - IP 
I'rni her ,i>r m>illl''iiiiiii' n ■in., 
i niiipiitei' itutllen In I !' • 1 
■mil 'O' level ^« 'lir 2 nr ‘‘•ale 

* " Al»l«H« idinli I "I ii'" . "»'l 
lin-thnr il.‘,alln linii, lle.i.lniui 
ter |h.A.i:.t. I.t , l4*l.tl 153440 


Scale 1 Posts 


previous iippllranta noeil nut 
rt'-npply. (3934.4, 133420 

LEICESTERSHIRE 


JOHN CLEVELAND 
COLLEGE 

Foraat View. Butt Luna. 

Hinckley. Lnlcn. 

In tha Lniceaterahlrn plan 
ror tho aruoniaatlun uf 
aarondary eduratlun. 

°ROT. , 7 4 .r 

MATMEMAIK^ 

Rnqnlrmi Hopteinlinri ox- 
iii'rle ninil tnulier of 
Motlioiniitli'X tu nliare work 
tu O.W.E.. ■«' mid 'A' 

level. 

Furlher dot nils from tlm 
rail. Apply Itimmitlaiul: 
iu forma) wllli rull par 
li'uiars and namaa and 

nWr r3i s $. lwo 


81IHOPBIURU 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 

WnpcKWAnuiNE wool. 


DOWNI.NI, sell, ml 
Nur 111 View, staple lllll. 

Ill Inlnl 

linquirml (ui Sepli-nihei- 
I 'I II '3 Stale | •■■tu lir i ul 

M A ITH'.M A I It'S ■■ ui.it lir 
reillill'e.l tu leiuli n viimll 
•iliiniinl ut n> Inn e 

A Ill'll, althlll liv li’ller t" 

the llnalil l'eni tier ■■in l.inlnn 
ii i iii i h ilium mil ilir 

llilinen nl | tv II lelerem .it 
muni un immlhle. 

Duwnt'iiil Si liinil In >i 

new I 1 - I H ynnr a Ini 

lltiiinl Cniiiitv Hei niuliii t 
hr, lnul uml will tie iipenlnia 
In Heptemlirr IbH'J mi Hie 
ainnliiiimu,lun uf ilie ,ue- 
nnnl t'niin Hirin' anti SlurK- 
wt'll lllll Srlntuls. l4Hlt56i 
155422 


AVON 1 >1 J N I V 
wn.I.hlVAV SflllKIl. 
i.'lliuuliiil Iiiiiul. Kevilnliilln. 

II r I-.I nl . IIS I H 1 1-14 
WellHwny In nil I I - 1 H mini'll 
i umiir elienni vr m IiimiI nl 1240 
(•uplift, 213 <tt tvliuui bit In 
tho Blntli Form.. The Srliuttl 
Ilea In a plnnnunt urea mlilwav 
botwnen Qrlninl and Mut It. 
Raqulred fur Boiimmiter 1111,4. 
a well ouulirii'U leurlier or 
MaiheinatU-B ISroIr li. The 
successful Candida to will lie 
required In tench Ilie r»ni- 
plotc ability range. Malltrnin- 
tlca la well-aubnrrlbril ut 
G.C.E. 'A' Level. Computer 
Studies la taught In both 
G.C.E. ‘O' love) mill C.S.I.. 
Thera are seven rum. Miters 
and an Interest In tills sulijet.i 
is welcome, tllougli out n rn* 
quire ninnt. 

Please apply Immediately in 
the Meml, iilvlug iinunl lie- 
tails, ii loinpltuue iiiimber mid 
two rclnrnif,. (49044, 13543*4 


BEDFORDH1UUE 

NORTHERN AREA 
ST THOMAS MORF. It.C. 
UPPER SCHOOL 
l^no Crescent, Dodfurd MI14I 

Heoiimastnr: Mr. A. J. Iltivle. 
Tel: Bedford 41201 . 

13-18 Comprehensive. 770 tin 
roll. 

Required fur September 11182, 
a loachar or Mathematics and 
Sclonca . Scale 1. The sun nns- 
ful applicant will he rrqulreti 
to work hair-tlma lit cm Ii de- 
partment. Courses are rilnli. 
jlslied tn A. O nnd C.S.L. 
levnlx uml C. E. K. «. uiirne in 
rurrnntly Imlnii devulnped. Six 
luburntnrlnx nnd five 

■nnt lie mu tlrn rooms Ini luiliun 
rumputer room are available. 

PoM aultulile for (•■'■iliaiRiii- 
nry tem.-lier seeking a firm 
nppiiJnlniuiil. 

Anplltrullunn am 

|ixrtlculnrl6y Invited from Hu- 
man Cathnlli: teachers. 

Application forms nnd 
further da tails from the Head- 


uu i ii ii in q 
l villlnbin . 

I iltml In,, . 

a first 


tlcuinrldy luv 
i Cathnlli: te 

RSr daVail. f. 
Aar, ploxxe. 


Is Iron, tiie Head- 

M« annlv, lm- 


J^OCjyVAniJlNC WOOD 
New [laid. Wrurkwurdlna 

SCALE 3 

MnJor role lu i-unttlltu > sue- 
eennrul depniTtnant. , 

Lpl lorn uf appUratlun dlrort 
tu IfenUmlsircNs. 144300) 

133430 


SURKIfiY 

EPNOM COLIilKii: ' 

SU&7>u vs ( 5 40 boHrilnr s tt|M) 
dny-lxiyn) Hixtli I'orin uf 200 

DT"P Hiiptomlior, 

'teHBff. ‘mm 

nusential. . A from modal lu n 

S vallnltTn far flnnle parnon. 

iwn • alary icaln, WllUnonosa 
to eon tribute to the act I vl lire 
or a lionrulna aahnol osxen- 

t,n !^\onao nppty with full curri- 
culum yltno and the jj mmpm P f 
ttfa rbferees to the iloadmba* 


RBDFORDHIflRR 

NORTHERN AREA 
JOHN HOWARD UPPER 
MCjiCHH. r 

nitldnnliatn Turn. Hedrunl. 
Ifnadmaxtnri Mrtt. Grace 
TeNlledfurd 49159 1 
13*18 rumprelmnslvr. No. 


lUKIIMKSMimATIONAL SUPPLEMEW 


m:uKsimiK 

i iii i mu 1 1 hi in, tu 

lliililu Iiiiiul | fine, IS 1 ■ini', «|i 
links III i 1 I 4NI 
N II II I lifli I -V ndriul! A||, 

I Hill 

lln'iiili etl r-eiileinlier 1‘1H4. III! 
Hut s I '■ Ilillll a-lieilslt r Ii, n,| 
I, Ai'lll T, •*! M A I III \| A- 
I l« K («>inle I I (■■ (..ill n Ini ne 
■ Mill tu. . e as, nl ale |iil, Imeiil . 

Millllt In Ir.t.li In '■>■ leta-l 
nl leas,. is rsseiillnl ,\|| 
■nr in tiers ul llie ileim, 
leni Ii nitnsa Ilir <iti|l(tt ritunr 
Ai'i'lli nili'ii I ur inn niul 

fmlUnr iletnlls In-in llrnilnins- 
,rl. at llie ti lii'.il laael t'tus- 
I Ii ii ilnle time 1 llerhslilre 
( .illlllv I ••llllitl in nil riitinl 


TRAFF0RD 


.OPOLITAN bOUOUOIl , Application for 

lAFPQRn further dotalla. urn 

ATI ON DEPARTMENT from the sihool.Li 

GRAa^AK SClK&l. P'tt-fc 


METROPOLITAN bOROUOH 

E DU C ON R DBP A iRTMBNT 

SALE GRAMMAft SCHOOL 
FOR GIRLS 

Mansi and Road i 84lo MSS 

kfAT^BMA^IOH SCALE 3 
Raqulred .September 1983 
Graduate ko teeoh to r p',sii 

laval.- Annlltistlai 


rrtatlcs Depertnient. 
llcqtloTi forms and 
r detaila. ure available 
the school . Large x.n.e 


roll 700. 

ltequlrod rur Mniilenilier 1082 
a Teacher or Matti'mintli a. 
Hcalc Ii Thn Micniissrui rniidl* 
data sluiiild Hnvft un Inlni'nm 
In tnnclililil slut 1st Irs niid/ur 
cumpulor studios. 

. Apnlh'otiun run, is uml 
further dntnils fi'pin the Head, 
ingntri'. n.n.n. idnuse. I'lrnse 

asrn«tf m l w8ir. a 

nEnFOUDHlTTRK^ 

i SMVWtfMiiom. 

ndinnstHr J, J'rnnrumbn 
lephuiin Kontfy aOflMB 
- 18 Cuniiirehnnsivn. . 

100 on roll 

niil red for . Nnpleinhn,'. 

83. a Mpnclullnt Tent her. 
scale l , to teach Mathematics 
throughout In a Rohnul . 

Ability to t«uoh tn "A' level 
Is esse, itlnli iliern will ulsu bn 
on opportunity In tnnrH 
Further Mathematlua fur u 
suitable candidate. An. |„. 
tereet In Romputere an ndvnn- 




I1KXI.KY 

I.IINIION lliiltnuttll HI 
ill \l.l Y 

l RAVI « lllll si ||i i« n 
Irani Mill I nne. ( iiitli.ral. 

HA I 4 Ilf 

lr| . C'rnvrutd 42*1 I 'll 
Wnilleil (■>■■ ‘i.'i'l ran lira t'lll'J it 
well iin.illl leal lea. her ■•( 
Mallaeiiinlli ■ f"l .ill enl.ili- 
llshe.l .anal r k,iiiiiillni> i|e,iart- 
ineiil, *t M l‘ Is l.t iiiihl lliriiniilt. 

■ nil llie «■ liinil in <'*,1 and *i,' 
level Interest lu i rinni||,i| 

■ niltlirni.il Ii * tvitnld lie nil 
itilt •■■■•line K.niie . uni iiiiI cr 
slii'lles w.inlil Iii- iiv. 1 1 1 it 1 ,1 ■ - (ti. 


StJTTON 


'arm .work is. avail- 
nimble candidates. 
Ion bv lettnr in' 


JOnOUQH OF 


iludlng names and addrasses 
if two . raferaaa, Derkahfra 


an llilr reslril . aillllil.il e 

Aunlli anon tliuiilil lie liy 
taller lu Ilir Head Teaitiei 
il l v I nit >t lull n. .iiiiiiI Ml rx- 
lierlrui n and iinalifli .il inns 
mid tlnllnu ilir •niuie- ■•( Itvti 
refrrees. 

Attlnlnnir it, lit i nun't ill ex. 
Iirliaes. legal (re-, anil ills- 
liirlniii. r allntvaiua i ail In- 
■ Iiilxldered . I. A. A. 1.1'HI. 

Ill XI.I.Yill A I II K III If l|. 
1 ^ 111^111 Itnad. lie xl e v hr till . 

Kant. l,Aft J HA 
T"l HI .31,3 fWk'IA 
Midi 1111,0 

MATIIf MATH'S, hi air I imn 
Krimlrril ftu Sr ,i( euil>r r l‘,H'4. 
a Matheuintli x irni her. S> ale 
I tu lull, u wall uriiiiutsed 
department nl 16 spui'hillsi 
tear liers. 

I, would hr .1 iidvxntnge II 
the aiMdlt'mn Is alsri aide In 
oftnr a ii v of llie following ns 
a seen, nl sulileit Ciinipiitur 
MliiillPH. Trrnrlul Iirattlm, ur 
fiamas 

Dntnils and nop III nl Inn 

lnrin •'mi lir ulitalfieil (>> writ- 
Inn In the xrlnitd and nil I'll- 
tun a Inuisiap s.a e. 

L-.A.A- £4‘IH. AsslQlmn « 

with ramitvai exiiriisrs. leuiil 
Frrx mill illsltirlianie nllii. 
wain r <nn lm i niislileri-il . 
(3*1344 , 133422 

nilADFOIU) 

CITV Ol HR ADI dltn 
MLTROl'Ol.l f AN CHINCH. 
WYKI. MANOR Si'll, II 11. 
Itetliilrnil fur Seiitrililier , 

I !IR2. n iirriiiniienl lull-11 

tnai her ui Mnllir ninlii s. The 
sili.icssliil i miilldiitn will lie 
nxprrtrrt tn lam Ii ai russ the 
rull ahllltv ramie tvllh an eu- 
tliuslaniil and Interest in dr- 


dunliried tedrlipra 
3 a course of train. 


Ing „thle veer ara welcome tu 
apply, aoud . facilities avail- 
able In a lively and aucoimsfu) 
Mathematics Dapgrlnient. 


plena*. Applications return- 
abla to tha Hoadmxstur within 

UU! 1 ?§ r B°3Y3 # ) ,°' thU 
133433 

BERKSHIRE 


of two . — , 

County .Council ie an 

sreng; “"H 

TAME8IDE 


'• West 8 West, Corshalton. 

■•teVred ' January JB63 . a 
teacher of MptHemetlde to 
entHualaatle leem. of 


|‘ ..level. . pxamlnattona' ■■ * 


ttOnnl material. CflH, QCE 'O' 
• ertfl A ..level • oxarninetlons 
- 'ere - well-established' 1 Tho 
.T.SChaql -bosseasaa two . 3802 
■ ;■ mlbrooomputari and CSB com- 
puter studios" Is taught it prat 


ASSISTANT teacher - 

matkeMaticawlovver 


F . would be suitable for a First'' 


Application forms' avail 
le from the Director or 
uootlon, atarrino s*n. 
on. Council orflceeLWnl 

a ion - Road. Ash 
or-Lyne, M 




(■Chester 

IW*^ 


voluplng ctmrsos (ur ilir less 
able. Mnllieniallrs . lx es- 
nmlnnil nt 'A' Irvel 16+ and 


CUB I Malhemntla s mill Arllli- 
■net let and llie Bradford 
Matheuinllrx l‘rnrtle Is heinaj 

I ilr va<la»pr d wllliln llie 4tli nnd 
3th (nrmx. The ilrperlnienl 
n»n Oil exnunaliiid t inninitcr 
dlldlrs hra I lull add a tvlllliin- 
unsn to hr, it with C ami, nil Inn 
nctlvlllnn would hr ■■■■ ndvnn- 

***A|i|»llrittli»H forms mav hr 
nhlnlned ironi the lllrei luriile 
I'nriaiutuel Oil'll •*. 4 ill I limr. 
Fruvliu Ini llmtse. ....Market 
Nicer i . ItraiillfM d. Ill > I INI' 
and eti ■ in I il he returned to Hie 


ISK' 

eiitliiisinstlc S 

WRH hons.n% ft 1 

pn ssniln. (49486, " 

camuridqebhihb 

! j ! "•[''■tNu.ToSEIVttii. 

liinil in, iiion. Comb, 

mixed I SSo 1 *' VOl ‘ con '' 
Rr.tuirrtl (or Bsoi«™w 
Teacher uf MslhxmV&.' ftf? 

1 . In Join a strong dnsrbHu 
nml share Isnefilns 

am ("nl.l n* ' can d 1 3 & 

serving MunitasSSfS 

nnliihtKiiirliODd.: Xcri, 5 

r e\ nr e csV 1 3*33 1 f f 1 " ** M 

CORNWALL 

hlHIC: ATION COMMITTEE 
Tnare is n removal etaenm 
halm me. i— 

I Al.MOllTIl SCHOOL 
Tri'scubnas noad. Falmouth 
Cornwall TR11 4LH ' 
Group: 13 
No un Roll: 1949 
•Sixth Form: 230 
llrariteachBri Mr. D.U. Trlbs 
ASSISTANT TEACHER 
MATHEMATICS SCALE [. 
Ki'fiulred In Septsmbir, « 
mailirmallclsn sbls lo un* 
up to ‘O' loyal. Ad Inurtu 
mart enthutlsim far worUi, 
will, luwsr sbllliy pxplb 
would bu an sdvanlsgs. 

I'leiise apply by IsTtsr,' Is- 
riudin ii rurrlculum vllu id 
i, nines anil Hddreatci of (»d 
refnrens, h> tha Hnndmnkr. 

I iirllier dot alls/ scknosldgi 
Irinii lli'odmantor on rsoim 
nl S.A.E. I391B4I 13341a 

DERBYSHIRE 

Ill'NIt Y FAN8HAWE SCHOOL 
I M'linf lelit, Slielflold. SlEtta 
A Honlur Cumprchonilrt lit 

n'.O.H. 1200 Mixed, loclidlig 
300 In thn Msth Farm. . 
Ueqnlrcil for BspUabtr. 
Tnnclier uf Mathomillci K. ill 
levals up tu ‘A 1 lovsl lo bio 
a III ran and successful mmv 
ment nl ill# School, shirt 
lakes pupils ot tlto IP of It. 

N ' Apply by louor with curi- 


Iipni Wllliln tile 4,li mid , t , , nVn vitae and rietslli e, Mo 

fivrnis. The itrparlnieiit rrlerrns m lha llosdiAlltf. 

v: mVMSp'gg* n 1 vviiiVuVi- f 

{!i.j , w! , ...hi* , i. , e sr^Vv 1 rw.' 2i ,i,oWunl iys i 


rrrrtiiniu'i 

1 ‘ruvliii Inl lliiiixr. .... Market 
Nirem. Ilrmllni d. IH»I INI' 
and eti i m I il he returned to* Hie 
flnnilieui lie r . W>l«e Mniiur 

hw baWm ’W. i?; v frri*. 

J'.r.n Vj 82. Rel IVI A\(Hia/ 
THW. (3'1'JftM __ _ 133422 

imADFOKD 

tong ni'i'i it Ncrifiol. 

Ilniiiired inr Hridemlter. 
lfing. a well uunlHIe'] teai her 
lir Mntlinirtnlli s. ka ale I. •(■ 

I tilit n nurressful mill exi'niiil- 
up ilnimr l men l In Mils > 13 ■ 18 
inlsril. I'lHitltreheiisive h'li'j'H. 
with 1430 puidia uu rull (160 
lu sixth mr ml. . 

Apidl, nlliill fur mis niilt 

lu(tl,nr alrinils . may . tin 
nhlomrtl (x.n.e. |i|ea«e, I, -mil 
Ihf llneillil aisle,'. InitO IR'I'er 
Mr I, lull. VVeslunte lllll, llrnil- 
fui'u. U|,4 nNIt . lu vvluuii 
«„M|llnlMI furins sliuulil hf. 
lurued liy fill . J ' 
llnf. Ii T . Alt', 82/ I I N. I3fl^f»j^ 


HROMI'F.Y 


BW" 

cofjt'i.RM hi: 


IIIUIUGII III 


CfHjRliltM HCIltirtl. 

Ilowkwiiml l.aun, ridslehurnr, 
Kent 11117 Bl'N . 

Itniiulrpti Inr hnjHpmlier l'lnj. 
Maths uraditMle in Irnrli 
tlirmiuMnut llie srhuu, up lu 
'(*' uml 'A‘ level. 

Cuiiliers lo n ■ u-nilut (jtlunel 

V urmnr Helm live orhnul. cull 
7(1. Hlxth I'nrm 190 with an 
Dll-nhilliy first- farm. 

Atiplluttlions lu the Heiiil- 

r meter as soon, ns, piiknlliie 
no lurnisl wllli thn names 

KAm’ybm ,,f ‘tujbs 


DEVON 

pinnae oee allapfaycd 
inmu un nooo 93. 

EHBKX 

rill.HAYNh HIGH SCHOOL 

cint tun.un-Hcs 

(Hull j 790* ...„ 

Tol : C.Tnrlaiil-nifSM. ** ■?' , 
Mntliumnllrs Toijchar 

issite. n iSL— "• 

'wVi'n Lip moil kiiooi 

'iV.dl^Vo.aoo in »lxth Form 
Kaiillwnrlh Oartloes. . 
Wenti I1 D.V ,, ’‘.V°Aq26 

•TWlKl-’SV** 

— .a® 2 ” 

| ,|»exe»._l3B4liai . 

IIAMI'HIIIHE 

fesMSBftfMS 

I'i&TA-nPJSUl 


HAVERING 


Sf*S" v 

Volun'.rv AIJ.'' • ' ' 

ittsL- mr 


»i VMM* i a ■ 

Ii nn oquil 


CALDEKDALE 

METROPOLITAN DOROUCill 

%Kvdbi.isa m* m.\«3 

Comprehoiisive will, courses 
ofrernu lo CEE, ‘O' and ‘A‘ 

l*^agulr«d from August 1989 
for. two terms only, atempof* 
try logcher of MATHEMA- 
TICS (Benin 1 1. The, srhuu l Is 
a well-establinlinri 1,1 - 1 J 

mlxod Comprnhoiislvo. nnd the 
timetable would involve work 
mainly In the Lower Brliaol. 
Tne poet arisen as a result of 
maternity leave- . „ 

Letters of application far 
the abava two posts to the 
Heodtaachar as soon os possi- 
ble giving full uurrleulum 
vitae end names enu undres- 
ses' or two releraae. 
OVENggN SECONDARY 

Required for the Autumn 

un Ukjitpwk& 

(Scale 1 1 to tenth throuMhout 
title ll-lp secundnry modern 
school where B.M,!’. le thn 
main course _fol lowed. 

Letters of apnllcmlun to 
• Die Headteacher by 1st junji. 

qugfl heaiYoiiH if W 

fill 


saans-as 


odvsntegn. 


ppllcatlon for 


Allow’unc® £?&■■ ‘ 


HILLIN0 d0I< . ■ 

t ' ONI ^ULL®NoS^". 0r 


or apnllcntiun i« 
melier py 1st June, 
ng rulj (let alls of 
me oiid. .expaarlenco 




• ■ r - . i-.; i- ■■ • ^ * V.'i ' : .v vi/ hi vn a ' -1. . 


fg? ic nrr* : 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 2I.S.82 


secondary MATHS 

^nrlnu o d 

HAVERING 

i ONDON BOROUGH UF 
ftjBEST l-ODCB ft C IIOOL 

464... 

™tgJ°rfMdtea n chor ! R.P.W. 


gMS S 

btWJS-n outlook. A positive 
in Comp u t a. r Klu.lh'S 
be an actvuiitunc uml 
Snallon work tu ‘A* luvel 
-.liable for u nidtailile up- 
SlSSt. Scsle 3 livid liilila- fur 

» experienced anplli niil. 

&'lt F C F 0°Bd n . SCHOnL 

I’Xechtti M.S. JiiHtlns. 
t^PORARY MATIIEMA- 

TICB TIcALE I roandra.il 
c!stamber 1982 to Inurli 
ftKTSBdAir Uppnr forms. 

For all posts lot l urn or up- 

B - stlon should bn sant t<> 
Hoadieschor rnuiminil 
Divine full curriculum vltm> 
inf quoting two , riifarnns. 
SilnB dsio: »4 iluys nfiur 

ihi iDonsrsnco or lids udvur- 
inuSSet. (393371 I334‘4'4 

HEREFORD & 
WORCESTER 
COUNTY COUNCIL 
Redilltrli 

ARROW vale high 
SCHOOL 

Ore on Sward Luuii. 

Ma ^t D ^ r cr^ h 9•a R 0 , UW ,,r,, ■ 


Required ror Snptnmbcr 
1(19 Maihemailcs btoln 1 
(or ibis 13- IB Co- educa- 
tional ConinrchcnilvF 

Srhool 1760 on roll I 
npened In 1976 In purpusn 
bull, bulldinpa. 

Thli poet arises Iron, 
growth In thn Srhunl. Ap- 
plicants should bn uhln tu 
leech at loss! to ‘O’ lnvol 
■H/idartL 

The ability lo uirnr u 
■ublldlary sublnrt Tor u 
year would bo o linlulul 
rKommendatluii . 

Applicant Ions shuuld bo 
by Inttar with curriculum 
vltaa and thn numna of two 
referral. Telnphnno un* 
milrloi wolcomn un Roil- 
Zilch 10927, 26800. 

HOLLYWOOD 
THE WOODRUSH HIGH 
SCHOOL 
Ehawhurat Luna, 
Hollywood, Blrmlnunum. 
D47 9JW 

Aillaiant Mantrr/MI stress 
lor Mithamatlcx Sauln l.ln 
tile 11-19 coniproiionnlvt) 
adMoL' to .leach thn sub- 
ktt throughout thn hi hand 

KiTOI $ 

r 0 n y .; Br ‘j( , / ,w Ri^ 1 s by Tu. 

imlnstlon work wuuhl bn 


•Jjy.fWsnnd un Intori'ht in 
Computer St ml i os 
be an ndvanruiio. 


H*2**a»tlfdan Hrnln 1 . 

hide tu loiicli 
up . to Unl- 
^bf'Sgo. ,l . nnr0 •■" l,llJ lnti 

H'lln.l ,* f^lnn h n ,'n [|4 a 

S»i r « 5"" 

g«e nave bnrmno uvnll- 
... to, niters ot 

&7h^ n ? n *»’ »» »■«» 


HOUNSLOW ~ 

nmu5 R,:i:N school for 
TW 3 , a^ rn,,r ' fslnworth. 
(Church o. ElIolnnil Voluntary 
Rull 683. 

Hoad TmiLhor: Mrx I & 

Hart lott . n.bc. Al 

c. Jm |irohc!!«lvo C RUih n Form 7* 

Sft tf-ierig 4 

prwa 1 

Miillinninllcsl^Tjmra^^s to rood 
eqiiinupd Mathematic* rDoS? 11 

mid odUrnss at 3 rnfSSSSP 

fj&jjr «n85iai 

HOUNSLOW 

LONllFOnn SCHOOL 
Turh .ruok Itoutl, F D I thorn 

wvvV, l ^f, r ; , 5 r i'. Mr - ° C E ' 

«.tSK:,s ,r :pi», fi| U Tg 

required lo lo.cl, the subject 
to all runttns of ability un 

. OHsmlnatlon * love, 2 
ana bo ublo to touch 'A‘ i«?ii 
Appiiod Mothamatlca. 0 

Lunnfurd School lx B w _n 
astnbllsliod 8 f.E. co-lducJ 1 

i m p ro h X** ii+to 

1 i “5“ rin P >300 on roll, 
p London Allowance £488 

ioSa° ,,no d “ to 2ath M xy. 

• ° r application to 

a fs T«*Ch»P alvIrtQ rifl. 

*“*!■ of qualifications, oxpiir*- 
nrtca and namee and ntldrnsanx 
of two rnforoM (s.a.e. fools- 
cop,. 135041) 133483 

HUMBERSIDE 

glJUGATlON DEPARTMENT 
EAST RIDING DIVISION 
MATHEMATiCB TEACHER - 

IIE8SI.E IIKill SCHOOL 

tee* mn3 0JQ ad '' Lan *- 
(Cu-ndurutlonsl 

(Uiauirad .for Septambar, 
J®* 9 “ WO 1 1- qualified candl- 
daie tn loach across tho one 
and ability ranne. 110 

Appllcutlon forms and 
furtiiar detail* ara available 
frcun Ihe Head of the school 
(s.a.o. please, to wham com- 
pleted forms should ba rn. 

.ta."’' 

KENT 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

sisisr 

OH .St un hope It i, ail. Aslirord, 
Kent 

M'llhs Hnni lalist Simla 1 re- 
•lulrntl Sont ember, to loach 
tnidiilv lu i.i, wer School, but 
iibllllv In inks lip to 'O' lnvol 


1JUNCAN liOWL'N SCHOOL 
OH Ktiiiilinpa lti,ad. Aslirord, 
Kent 

M'llhs Hnni lalist Simla 1 re- 
•lulrntl hontem bor, to loach 
tniilldv lu l.i, wer School, but 
ubllHv in liikn up in ’O' lnvol 
deslrnble. 

Apply bv i orm ur iattor to 
lli'iidlnaster. I3U378) 133422 

KINGSTON 

MliVF.RI.r.Y SCHOOL 
lllnkus l.iiiie. New Malden. 
Murrey 

(Tel. 01-'I4!) 15371 

No. ui, Iliill: ll»30 buys 6lh 

l-tiriu: .13.4 


Ni itln I I pm Imr rnaulred for 
Ilir Mnllir, until s Daiparliilnnl, 
iti'inlltnln prnriii'i'nil. Ohio to ' 
lenrh in nil Miilliy levels. 


I'lin DrpnrtiiU'ill lx very 
sti'iinii anil infers courses In 
Mel lietii, it Irs lit C.H.E., 


nasal 'A*. Jovul 


1| 0Z71 tnrl * . -® 11 V' 1* ( Rh , 1*111 r nml nppllnil etui niarp 

•wiutq (n usd with Milllstlas, uiiiI It, Cnnipu. 

JM aucceanrul ranilblntaa !'! f Sluilles ail I'.H.i:., ‘O' ami 

in the rirsF iiiatnui'n 1 hi! A level. An nlillltv In Cun,. 

S * B,0 lni«d le ihn'ViitliaVcltv miier Hlmlies waiaiUl be un 

JtWfitfOQ to any one ui aiilynutmii'. 
aboim 3. . . I. * * nr l‘)r,ixe state a, liter Internals. 

Annlsl iliu ai wllli nlly uf thn 


e»„.WA"'- u , tu; 


LEICESTERSHIRE 
JOBN ■.8t£Z§k Am 

LEICESTERSHIRE 

■SPSa^- 

•xft&vaf. , 

tS* few."?.!?; ™ yWs 

prRajsj* a,, y P , , » , ° r ° fss 

S3&B'®S9rS 

— (38028) 133422 

LEICESTERSHIRE 

B aSSfcP^ b Hi 9 M school 

s Wo a ton 

in u.« V ,n . a ' holcnntar 
lr V^r^Ji B,0 ** ,a r ,,1 lra plan 

"H&t'lA* 

MATHEMATICS 
Scale 1 

F, 1 h rou Bti O u t IT1 age C *an d 
Snv xJUSILV* Pleaae state 
terasief' d “ ub J* ct 

Furthw details from the 

* n ? names and 
two ref areas 
(sea). (383771 138422 

LINCOLNSHIRE 

BPALDINO HIOH SCHOOL 
FOR GIRLS 
Roll 687 

1 a $S« ulr '* , ft i r September. 
IJ®,*'. Aestatsnt teacher 

ouV the icho^uo' oce^cI* 

Sixth "form! 0V * l, ‘ 160 ,n 

.. |, “rmx and datalla from 
the Headmistress at tha 
School. Stoneaate. Spald- 
ing. Lines. PEI I 2PJ on 

forma 'ahoufd^lj'e t ?.^ r h „ 0 0 '3 

?3*83,*9°)°" ** . 

LONDON 

HEART HlOH 

? ‘ 2, Hsmmoritnlth Rood, 
London. W6 
■ Roman Catholic Olrls 
Secondary School, roll 580.) 
Scam (■ ’ftnquirpd m Septem- 
bpr, 1882. Graduate to share 
Mathomstics • ^ tnschlna 

throughout tho school up to 
end Inoludlnp C.8.E. end 'O 
level. A first appointment 
would bo oonildered. The 
School ha* had B doltiprghen- 
slvo Intake slnae 1BT7T 

Apply in the Mrst Instance 
with curriculum vitae and tha 
uumes and addrcixes of two 
roferoos to the HeadmlatraM 
nt tha above xddreea. (3^084^ ' 

NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE 
EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
ill'. A TON SCHOOL 
TEACHER OF 
MATHBMATll 
'Heels I past) 

Irod from 
1888 . for nne year In 
Inatgiicei a sul 


NORFOLK 

te.°a?Mff'sssr 

on ,5“ih 650 
•2—16 Co-od 
comprehensive 

8cale 1 Mathematics 
1982 qu, H rad i a ri Sxptoqiber. 

P&, % 

level will be an advantaoe.' 

rfWHE aJtmt 

sf B ,h« rilR l. Readmsaler 
raca'lp" *>" 

HEIVJETT SCHOOL 
Cecil Rood. Norwich 

on Roll: IB 70 
360 8lxth Form 

SC<lla J 

Speclnllat 

ia5a qu i*5o r P f Septembnr. 
ib e z . SMP Maths scheme 

For^n * i?lVh n ' 8,ron Jl Sixth 
i th “'OP® ror 'A' 
nnd S' lovol work. 

xnH PPReetlon forma from 

mnater at the school aa 
soon aa possrble. 

NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

MOULTON SCHOOL 
Pound Lane. Moulton, 
Northampton 

at , T S r 8*>PU»mbar 

at tnla 11-18 comprehen- 
sive school (B40. on roll) a 
Hmarr . ^toichSr L* 
MATHEMATICS. 8oale 1 , 
for one term only. 1 

?«*■»>• and er>- 
form avolleble 
from the Haadmaiter (SAE 
plesse). (462471 133422 

NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

NORTHAMPTON LINOS 
SCHOOL. 

.(Billina Brook Road, 

Linas. Northampton NNS 
4NH) 

TEMPORARY POST 

,.A teacher of Matltema- 
,rom tho 1 st 
Bepteraber to cover tho 
work of a member of atarr 
Who le on matornity leave. 
The Mathemetlcs Faculty 

iiSSSd an preps rad P course 

SaQUmMidffi: 

laptcs, 

rur!5Sf ,t S'. l f,1i. 't r r?‘ .viM 

completed Tor ms should be 

^ r c n 4 n fi i Q 8 , ) ,,00n 

NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

““ UT "5» B a™.1 ,,00, - 

■lISMSlfhBWIMflr 


REDU RIDGE 

LONDON BOROUGH OF 

REDBniDOE 

c AN,ON PALMER R.c. 
SCHOOL 

»'fJ b °rouuh Road South, 
Soven Kln^a.^lirard, IG3 

Tel: 01-597 2133. 

Head E. B. Davies. U.A. 

ber. OC, r9aa d r n ^0 ^ , a ®Ptom- 

M.ih.in 9 ^. fcrSlSffr.-rt 

l. wkh" p f?. a .i *• °. n S raid 
Allowance. ° Ut4IP Loni10 '' 

The P Rn»rt 1 r8C J b v letter tu 
alv*ng *u?f “f -gf- 

names nnd addressos or I 


SEFTON 

of sefton ,TAN noK our ‘ H 
EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
MAR, COURT HIGH SCHOOL 
Kl in? 0, Matjhull. Llvnrpoul 
TEMPO A A n Y TEACHER OF 
MATHE1MATIC9 (Srale 1 1 V„. 


?ai r a“ r for SEFTEM BEft 

191)2. for onn veur tu cover 

"Sc • iSCm lo '*•**' a,lb - 

r * c J! ,p *.- of ■ e.s.e.j "from 
Schooi ,,eadt *“ ChBP tl ‘« 

■ .SWSIa.^- 

SHEFFIELD 

Vi vzxys? 8 ^io A o a L TNiENT 

S^wlck Lana, 330 3NN 

rfltl n ,ne . .. bo u,omt,nr. 

(. *' nr MsaeaiRft.. 

fnuihRss 

*b" Head Toachnr to 
Whom tliey should Lb rn. 

‘' n ®d within two wanks of 
the oppaeraiice of this adver- 
tisement. (38530, 133422 



EDUCATIHM 


Unless otherwise staled: 


Closing date for receipt of applications Is: 4th June, 1982. 
in respect of posts In middle schools, forms arc available from 
and should be returned lo (he Director of Education, Deport- 
ment of Education, Great Ocorge Street, Leeds. LSI 3AE. 


F u T ,n “* ond « r y Wfih schools, application by Jcttcr 
should bo made lo the hend teaciicr of the school concerned, 
giving Tull details and the names of two referees. 

The post reference number should be quoted on all corres- 
pondence. 

Applications requiring acknowledgment and requests for 
roims and/or details must be accompanied by a stamoed 
addressed envelope. r 

All vacancies are with effect from 1st September, 1982. 

MIDDLE SCHOOLS 

SCALE 1 POSTS 

W.92S nREBMim.L MTODLE SCHOOL I No. on refl, 430, M3 Min) 
8*"*!$ L*edi. LSD 4JI. T«ltphono: 613271 

ikid Te«Aor Ml. S. \V. Biteioa. 9. Ed 

Teicher of Muilc. Pkain IndKiM other «(>)«« oBrrcd md ucn of 

5.916 HUNSLET C. OF E. MIDDLE SCHOOL (No. as ml, 271, 8-11 1nnl 

2?,ft te*,: S'WiJ" 1 ' 1 ”""'™ 

ft? 

« ... I ,B#d 40 (he school. 

5.917 SAND FORD SI, DOLE SCHOOL (No. as n0< 4*5, 9-13 ttxr.) 
l^nAMr Mount, Leeds. LS13 20Z. TetcphoncTwSos * 

• Head Teacher: Mn J. M. Kimood. D A , 

Muifc lo work Aicughoui the othaoi. Please state ocher 

SS^^ , « , p S 4 "S!;‘ :UT^,e,,|,, 1 5' eT “ l « ln,ereU in Remedial work wrl- 

com e. SP .A. sllowsiice pnetfc. 

m fT£5E? J K!£ 3tu *-** i«n» 

MMhUAIJM MW. Tdephene: 733261 
Held Teacher: Mr. J. .DcaumoM 

towow nitaiy lo ihe T»ird and Founh Year graun sad *Me 
to oner miner Science ur French . Interest ta rpoel savan(i|MUi. 


pjfjfli Kettering (900 nqed ■ _* 

“% I HIGH/SECONDARY SCHOOLS 


^:,= tlc , K r .) ah?a 

i%' h Z r c e E Cp o ri ” ve?j 
■oval work may be ovall- 
oWe for • suitably^ qual 
Iflad applicant. Further In 
formation end rdrms of ap- 
plication, to be returned 
within two week* of this 
advertisement to the Head- 

mm. 


NORTHUMBERLAND 

BLYTH RIDLEV COUNTY 
HIGH 

Sj^th Avenue, Blyth. NB34 
Group 11, 13 - 18 


I i, (iitim Alluwami'n C498. 

. Ati|,||i'utl«Mi fornix . and 
(ui'tlifir cira, nils nre uvntlabia 
I ruin ni, it rnlurnaliln tu tho 
llai.id iiinxl »r lit diet KpIiuq. 1 , 
13044111 


tirhuol. 

133422 


IL Wi dIi ah "ffrnln 1 * 1 V l,!l> *" f 8ln 

S'lWiW’S K °J!!i“lS!i 

i i^l 1 ! rtaulrmf 1 ' *EL ,€,, \f* d °l»* 

IsJ ssirtta! 


KIRKLEKS 

METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 
COI.NI-. VALLEY HtOll 
NClirxJL 

oillruyd l.nnn. I.lntliwalto. W. 



(illlruyd l.nnn. i.lntliwalto. W. 
Yurksfijm 111,7 SHI. 

(Itr.F, 709, . 

ItniMiii'oil for 31 Aupuet 1988. 
u HCAt.K I tnainor of 
MATIIKMATICN. Tlio poet I n- 

W lves luui-blng grnupe In the 
- 16 aiiriion of the school. 


In NnutKl i'Iuxsdn and the siic- 
rnssful cundlalntn will ba 

BiKmirawii..."* iii®? 

lint* tn tnauh soma Junior aci- 
nnm would bo advantogeoue 
bill not iiHoniliil. 

i.eitors nf application In- 
eluding ctirrliuluw vitae and 


SS WmS 2 !a iii mil? TllWltl o e f * A wlflC? 

PMnll*. Oi>ncir? 11 V, f i^ bill not onion tin). 

58»r «•*?•* for ConiouTn.. I.eitors nf application In. 

JhaJii * n 4 > tho ichor?, IL eluding curriculum, vitae and 

WB, 1 BQuinnml In the unmos nml addresses of 

x»SK a ‘v - "“uippod in lw „ rj.fur.-BH tn tlio Hrodmaa- 

SBaBn'y letter ' fr. »•... tar. (394 UU) 133432 


NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE 

^smssL 

HEMATICS 
a 1 post) 
squired from 
1 , for one : 
once, a su ... 

r itr of Mathema 
pdlntment to j Scsle 
this county Co-educ 
rehanaivd Hiph pcHoo 
.„^ilcatldn , form* 
furlher particulars are o 
able from and raturheb 
the Heed Teeoher. C 


rimixn Stittn III liar intfipata. appointment to e Scale .1, poet Uopulrad rrom September. 

Annin | i|m ai wi n tiny aif the at tlile County Co. oducatl oriel VBBa. leecher ,of Mathemei 

■ •lliiwiiin wuiilal be in, ndvnn- Comprohenalve. School. WIT* ties . Tha Hchool fa i lows 8&P 

JP*J n : Wuxli i ruioUy, lingnan lo oislst wit), Doy’s . baeea counaa and the par- 

t iu kail. I'l'juiliui. otc._ nil me* may bo bii advantage, .nn imminUH waum h* «. 

but not essentia). 

fur^fiar 

Wi” 

Hr-hOOl. _ 

NoWCBBtlO 


son sppointad , would taa ex- 
pected lo ahare In work ut 
[aast up to 'O' Laval. 'A' 
Level work available (n near 
future to suitably qual triad 

( tarapn. Removal expense* and 
edging allowance may ba 

P W.ba*.on - form. • return- 

^dF/ecI,^ J yj?8k B 7) nd . 1%'a& 

OXFORDSHIRE 


Group 14 (Federal .8300 ■ . ;• 
pupil* in 3 Hall*, 11-13 and 
Upper School 15-19) 

Required for ___SentBmhBi‘i 
1982 s wall qualified apeclal- 
1st teacher or Mathematic*. 

C bla to teach throughout tho 
na ragga to-ell levels, ijielud- 




e h d. 

®^k N Ei?c J s H p.°^:. 


J ibia to teecn tnrougiiout ino 
□e range to ell levels, iiielud- 
ng OCE A-level work. 

Apply by letter, iiteludlng 
particulars > of quslirioatlonB 
and exparlenco and two namaa 
for reference. . pa soon aa 
possible to the Principal, 
Further detail* available- SAB 


SCALE 4 POST 

W.t» CIWWSHAW SCTOOL JNo. es rail, 920: I Ml nan) 

Tarixphcw: 5775D 

Head Teacher: Mb* D. Rikv 

VEXiaStiXa tiNSSE* 

SCALE 3 POSTS 

K8.VJ0 ALLEBTON GRANCT SCHOOL (Na. aa mlfa 1 Mi, 13-1* 

Ai^ue, UJ7 « p . Teb^ww: 1 

Head ot Home Eooemnica; the nhfcci b traghi lo I6+. O sod A 
Inch, wllli Needlework to C.S .E . 3 *nd A tereb Caadidaic, should 
. .l *? sctosi itc m nfa la om of ibcw arcu and contiibut* 
10 Ido otter. 

W-M' W. ( MICHAEL-S COLLEGE m.C. AIDED, (Ha. aa rslli.710 bays 

k 'fflsd . Lecdf. LS3 1EY. Telephone: 4S2316 
Head Teacher: Mr. M. L. Rutte^tod 
Teacher at Mink u be twpoculWa for the mbket thmubaui the 

EJM Srt*'* am raHi CM 13-18 

lsm 

SCALE 2 POST 

N.B.IM BOSTON SPA COhIPRBHENSIVE SCHOOL (No. ea mi. I.Mfe n> 
- 11+ win) 

Ckdbnf Moor Rand. Bottoa Spa, Wciherby. LS2J 4RW. Ttlephonc: 
Bouon Sra 842913 

He*d Teechen Mr. P- D. Sutton; B Sc., BA 
. Tdscbcr of Meilwmallct to like mpaniiWity within Ihe depuimem 
Tor Lower School Mithcimiica (Yean 172). bail wilh leschins caouiilt- 
"g»t kn d» hB nse and aMity nn*e; abftftj io leach S-M.P.. A 
OTn KTVtQIIgMMlr 

SCALE 1 POSTS 


1 3341 

Hillingdon 

OF 



KIUKLICSH 

METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 
willtcLIPPE MOUNT 
NCJHOOL 

Turneteads Avenue. _ „ 
Cloiklioalun IIII 10 JAQ . ■ 

13 - IH (1350 + 940. In Sixth 
^a-edurxttonal 

Kr-i'iuirnd *for Slat August. 
V?A f 1+ EMAt I C H. y SC°ALE r I. 

nine 

thn nbanurt*. on ntaiornity 
leave, of tlm pnrmnnniit mem- 
ber or Mnrr who taanliai i to 
‘A* level. I'luusr Ihtllcetc apa» 
trial IninroBin In math a in a tic a, 
lhn Xu, mu I which *h° 
iisn uf a Nporta Centro on the. 
ntnm Nltr. la «1 tup ted Is J 
plpiisant rnsluAntjnl area 
within min mllu ui Junction 

* Lntlnri^uf uwi»l leal Ion. .men - 
tlnnlnii dntnils uf 
umillfiratiuns. nxnorlencn 9* 






iisa of a Nporta Centro on the. 
ntnm site, la •iltiigteU !■ i « 
plpiisant resiaAnijnl area 
within miii mile uf Junction 

* Let! erx^ui uppllcatlon. .mon- 
tlnnlnii dntnl to uf 
qmillf Iro tltiilx. oxnorlence 9* 
tnnihliig. Intnrnsl- 
hiThiuI n« tlvltlna and lha 
namns Of Iwa* profossmnalre- 
fnra'BS aallfl lllll DU Will 3" ■®J7B 
ne ijnxhllilo to U'p lluadmastjir 
from whrrrit <1 "tulle of aehool. 
mav bar nhialnntl. (394BB^ 


NORTH YORK8HIRB , . 
g?‘K'orT?omnu,ln. .n 

•"JBffllBfalS'V 

assiss SrJisr-V«3' si 

NORTH YORKSHIRE 

SS& v- 

frf is rural eomprehoneivo,. 

nWrBSL .Si, rram 


Required Tor September 1983 
a Taacher (Scale, li to teach 
Mathematics throughout tha 


K h ‘AY'B.p?r7f&M!J 

g.M.P. Course: j B folio Wad. to. 
■O’ level and various C.S.E; 
courses ora -of farad. 

Apply by'lbtteri With curri- 
culum vi tea ‘and hemee of two 


rereraas 

enclosing 


J tee 1 and names c 
I to thoHcadtp 
ig a.n.a. IIS401J 


OXFORDSHIRE 

COUNTYi COUNCIL' 

wlPh'*60 in tlie- 6th Forma ■' 
Requlrad 'from- Septamber- 

3585 tor baa -year, « Jumper-, 

ary teacher for ■ a large and 

pwtmSrtt- 511??^'” ta?cV. 

fBLnhsK 'fi&ile- 

S. l STO u ^ddfee.“£? t^o 
ro/qrQB^ ihauld.iia -^enfc to- tho 

& (te“ eh0r ; rnh. 


soon as E.ftH JOHN SHEA TON 11I0H SCHOOL (Ng. es rath IJOOr 13-18 nan] 

' fiSm" 1 A^ * oat,l ■ Bsr,rick Ucd*. LS15 8TA. Tclepluae: 

, Heed Te»cMr Mi. T. 6. B. Ihqra, M.C. 

in. 0X8 ■ Tesebcr or Soclsi SuxUra snd Hhioey. ehto shoiaoltor Saxtolonm A 

• 11-16 N.WUS LA.WNSWDOD SCHOOL (No. am rail, I.Ufc tMl 

tier 1983 Umiumd, Uxdi. LS16 3A0. Tekpban*: 7MJZI. 

“J *■«£" Head Teirben Mr E. Pollud. M.A. -‘ 

°Btud|ea W wrt hw) to join the Bade Stodk* Dcpuimcnt. 

or. ThS ^*,.5“ •«>» Rsl Him* jdth tdwjilon*] dRAalhin. 

o Wad to FUi-tlme. a^^nli ihcnMitato otht, subjecu oflued. FhHbn doiaili 

s C.S.E; mslUbte from lk* IIcedTeecber. ' ■ 

• MEISHfOWE SCHOOL flto. m raSt 1.924: IM9 pan) 

3405? ' 'W.9J* Te*eMr of Homo Ejtjoomic*. msferiNy sbk lo trfhr An. 

135499 W.M7 Tuebcr of Oecpapfty. ^rahinMy able lu olhr SvchHogy. 

. WJM • Tracker of CbeZiSxV. pieUnMj able la 6Hrr fl*low • 

' ST. kUCUAEIf'fi COLLEGE (K.C, A1DEUI (Ne. «(nBi 718 Jtojst 
1J-II j dn) 

St- loh a'* Read. Leads. LSJ 1EY. Telephcme- 4)2XM 
<4_ 3JY ■ ■ Ante* Head Ttitkc Mr. M. L. Ruhertad. 

f. 1050 .TV.939 Teatber Cl RebtfniB Edeckdon thrnnyheet the Khooi. 


Ttscbtf at Etanonlcs; Udt wb]e« ii lou*bl to A tnd in-toe Sixth 
Run, ami ooe-yeu O levd or C.S.E. cpvnei fai Economic* « 
Commerce bm provided for boy, following anc-)eir Sixth Fwm 


TEMPORARY. POST (SCALE 1) 



• .rad, lJA; 13-18 ,nn) 

Ik It phase; 782J2I i 

MA. -■ 

JW- «lu« «i scModaieai: teacher at 

Mile giber ubjeeu otTered. 


- h\$ 

/ J 

1 

'pi 

: : i 



THE TIMES KMH AT10NAI SUIFU^ 


SEC MATHS 


SHEFFIELD 
CITY OF 8IIEFFIBU3 
Education O apartment 
ABDEVnALE ORANGE 
SCHOOL 

Haatlnga Road, Sheffield N? 

2GU 

11-18 Comproheuelva School 
1.550 oh roll <800 In 0th 

Required from. Geptomber. 
1888 a Scale I teacher yf 
Slut hemal Ice to teach the ■Mb* 
Ject acroee the ago and ability 
ran OO ■ 

Apply by latter lo the 
Head manic r at the School, 
nlvlnu a curriculum vitae and 
the namaa and addresses and 
telnnhona numbers of two re- 
fereea within one week of the 
Alipearancn of thin ailverilnu- 
ntctil. I5BBB0) 133483 

SHROPSHIRE 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
ADAMS SCIIOOI. 

Went, Sliropeliiro SY4 SIJll 
MATHEMATICS TEACH E It 
llenulratl at thin mined cum- 
protsa naive school. Roll 

T. 800. 

Apply hr letter in Head- 
master (twn refereost. 
<448961 155438 

SHROPSHIRE 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
PRIORY SCHOOL 
Lonsdin Road. Shrewsbury 


Longden I 
SY3 9EE 
TEMPORi 


?! SFaWema! 

TICS roqnlrrd tn work nit to 
•O' Laval. 

Applications from and ra- 
turnobla to the Haaclmlittrrn" 
as anon as possible <S.A.E.i. 
<443091 135422 

SHROPSHIRE 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 

m E JOHN HUNT SCHOOL 
- 16 I 130 Mined) 
TEACHER OF MATHEMA- 
TICS (SCALE 1) required 
September for broad age ana 
ability retiHO. , . 

Letters of application with 
curriculum vltsa. special In- 
terests and names or two re- 
ferees to the Headmaster. The 
John Hunt School. Gibbons 
Road. Trench. Telford TF2 
7 JR IS. A. R. lor further do- 
tails)- <4 43 03 ) 133 428 

SOLIHULL 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 

k ANGLEY SCHOOL 
Inalon Croon Road. Olton. 
Solihull BB0 7 ER . 

<Oroui> 10, 11-16 mixed, ell 

ability, purpoeo tiuilL 77 7 on 

Elcnulrtd September. 1983. 
Mailiomatlcs Teacher Scale I. 
The succoBeful candidate 
would be expected lo tench 
MatbematlcB throughout the 
ana and ability range. The 
echaol has threo ccimputori 
end etatlstlcs and computer 
studies are Included In the 
courses taught to examination 

level. 

Apply to »ha llaudnitstress 
giving full details or quallflcn- 
tlons anti BtiinlnsL'n. tintl the 
names of two rafertipn fp lamia 
onclosn a.n.e.l. HStlfll 


SOUTH GLAMORGAN 

S NlTLn WORLD COL.LEC1E 
F THE ATLANTIC . 

One assistant laurher re- 
qulrad * sen display Item In 
Sixth Form “nd l^jrtlary Col- 
leae secilnn. 139-1081 133424 


ST. HELENS 

PAH It HIGH SCHOOL 

ill -IB years mixoa 

. MeotXa^|. f^HoVens 


Hyauabla far 
plteant. 


■ Awplloatlon forms are 
available Ira* tin (load 
Toucher fToT. {R. Helens 
' 84348) to whom may 

r*™' 

SUFFOLK 

THE DUNKS mail SCHOOL 
° ■ Ln went art 

Ho on Roll il 800 (13 to tflv 


iQcher of Maths 
i ta teach 


iriunn, 1088 

t atice (Scale 
letliematlcH 
eimol. 


throughout tlie sahaol. 
STOKE HIGH SCHOOL 
Ul - 16 Mixed . 
ComprelionslVai roll. BBS) 


MATH EM A - 


IS (SCALE II required 
it ember 1BB8. Newly quel, 
q toeeliera. wslcomna- Fre- 
shly e. full-time appoint- 
iart-ttrna 


merit althouph . c 
would ho considered. 


t ^OHN LEMAN MIQH 

rfftv ttMT'" 

E H tf!?** 1 L ra A b TH A : 

TICS, preferably wfth an In- 
tcrul Ip Computer Studies 


SUTTON 

LONDON noitoi'dll OF 
BUTTON 

WA1.L1NOTON IIIC1H 
SCHOOL FOR (illtl-S 
Wo nd cu in lliiail, Wallliuiioii. 
Surrey HMA OFI1 
Required Rrpumilinr 11188. 
well -qualified iirnduatn in 
i until Mathematic* tlimiiqliuut 
this ihrr*/(our-l»»rni entry 
Reler 1 1 vo u Iris' nchiiol in O 
and "A" level. 

This ll a Media 1 post with 
e posalhilliy uf Scale 3 (nr a 
suitable candidate. 

Apply by lei ter, Including n 
curriculum vlioe and the 
■tunic" ul two referees to thr 
headtenrher at the school as 
saun as possible. c " 36 ,j S4 . aa 

TRAFF 0 RD 

MUT1I0P01.IT AN linHOIKill 
OF TR A I- FORD 
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
LOSTOCK SECONDARY 
SCHOOL 

Selby Hoeil. l.«>Btn«'k M3U DPI. 
061-865 6215 . 

MATHEMATICS NI’AI.F. I 
Itequireil September 1 383 tn 
tench Macliniuailrs ilirouiilioui 
the Nchnul. An ininreRl In 
Computer studies und/or rr - 
medial simllee an dilvaritniin. 

Applicants should telephniia 
the liaailmaster immediately . 
(35258) 133483 


WEST SUSSEX 

THE LITTLE1I AMPTON 
SCHOOL 

Mixed 11 • IB Comprehensive 
12000 on roll l 

lluiiuli'nl NdplHinlinr. l curlier 
nr MATHEkfATlCfi. A pram- 
rsnime can be brlori'il w run n 
wide nge and ability railin'. 
BMP tailiiht at Advanced, 
Ordinary unil C.K.E. levels 
aild thorn are roursos in 
R.K.A. Arithmetic find C.H.E. 
Money Management. 

Pleune upply to lleadniuainr 
giving rnlavant personal dn- 
tultn nnd quoting names and 
addrossea of two referaBB. 

ABBlatance will be glvan to- 
wards the coat of removal nnd 
rnaeitlement expenses In 
approved canes. (4BT44) 


WEST SUSSEX 

WARDEN PARK SCHOOL 
Drand Streai. Cuckflald. 
Haywards Heath. 

11.16 Mixed 
Comprehensive. 

Required September, Toucher 
nf Mathematics (Heals 11 able 
to touch throughout the age 
and ability rnngo. 

Form A dntnlle from Iho 
Headmaster on racoipt of one 
pleona. 

npinovHl axpenaea In 
approved cases. I38B4II 


WILTSHIRE 

BISHOP WORDSWORTH'S 

SCHOOL 

Salisbury 

(Bays Grammar: 790 on roll; 
Sixth: 2001 

MATHEMATICIAN Ron Hired 
for September. Uiirnlinm Minin 
I. A ailitubln rnmlldutn woulil 
be offered niallieinnllrs 
teaching tliroughuui the 
school, Including 'A* Invnl 
anti Open Hcholurnlili) work. 
The department In large unit 
the subjert the muat nunulnr 
sixth form cliulrn. Ability tu 
develop compullnn using our 
own micro- promt" lira. as a 
major cumniHninnl. would lin 
an ndvonteog. 

-Letters of nppllcgtlon and 
aurrtculum vitae in The Hoati- 

HKSST: 

bury, from whom further par; 
tlculara. may .bn .of ' 


an advantage. 

-Letters or nppllcgtlon and 
aurrlculum vitae In The Hoad- 

HKSST: fhoWft 

bury, from whom furthar par- 

fcSVSleuW.r (4%7e?WS3 


WILTSHIRE 

HiallUURY SCHOOL 
L|uvpr stock, SnllBbury 8P 1 

lie q id rod tor Hnptbuibar 
1988, a niiallrind teacher n 


Raquirod rur Hnptrmibar . 
1982, a niiallrind teacher nf 
matliaiuaUiiq to taarh the ruit 
age and ability range in this 
11 to 15 boys' sncaiidary 
modern <700 on mil). o.C.ir. 
anil C.H.E. ctyirHaa lira wail 
aatahllaliBd. . The. anccessrut 
candidoio will Jain a Btrnnu 
team or 4 apaiTallelk whirl. 
Has a wall uevnloiind inloru- 
aumimtar course, Tim re It* a 
pans Ibl lit y of a Strain B lor b 
suitably oyalWlad and expert- 
n tiiied an pit in til. 

■ Application, faring (or n lat- 
ter of nnplIaBtlniD from Hie 

MjViSSaSP rBC#W i3?5aS 


WILTSHIRE 
S@U€;aT/ ^ 8 hod^. M ,T,:rBK 

sUl dan Covlnoliam. 

Headmas't'ai't Edwnrd' Wplla, 

s^vsi?. ^jassei 


pu r pose 
with 1 
nttrnelh 




'aafti 


as «oqn . M po 


. WUUIAL ' ’ 


Surrey ; . - .. 

1 

fVSt - iV^ixeii Comp liSOO qV . 

' : 'M h i^iLiVift{asiis' : ' 

. - 1988 , to ' teach all .MavBlq, 

, Strong . Department.. - large o 
aKd A level entry, - ntany unlr . 


-il OQO boyg 


aolrqi 


;VnWn; 

ft-' '■ 


WIRRAL 

MF.THOPUI.ITAN 
imildllGH OF tVlllllAI. 

HOI K I'F.ltlt Y IlltJII 
SCIIOOI. 

Hava ns wiiml Avenue. Itui'k 
Ferry. II like nil rad. Wlrrnl 
L4U 4N V 

lUiys Ciimpraliannlve 
Hiliool < fuminrly lirumnuir) 

1850 wllli ii Mslli form uf 

Hegulrsd for September. 
1988 a suitably well uunl- 
I f 1 ml lirmltiolr Mot hemal I* 
cliin Benin I la Jiitn a very 
strung ami surresslul «*•- 
liartniont which offers a 
wide rnnun uf rulu-ses Up 
to ndvaurril level ami llill- 
vnl-alty eiHiailre. Tile per- 
sun npiHilutell must Have 
the ability Hi teeth 
Malliein atlca tu both Uni- 
versity entrance. A proven 
Interest In end Ilia ability to 
tench Computer btuillcs In on 
important quallflcatlun. 

Fur (wilier details nlsnse 
talnpliuua 051 645 6917/9. 

i'loimn apply In writing 
Inimndlniely In Ills Head- 
master at 111" »• lmnl "ll- 
irloslnn Hill detallB 
tiinnthar with curriculum 
vltao and names ill two 
persons In whom rsferoilfo 
could be made. <389151 

I ilOftsa 


WOLVERHAMPTON 
turnout. ii <:()i>Nt:il. 
IIDUCA riON COMM1 I 1 I.F. 

VALLKY PARK kCIIDfll. 

Itouulred fur Hepinmlmr. 
1988 becauBO nf coilllnuml 
expansion nf tills lluier- 
urbun 1 1-18 cnmpraliunalvn 
schnnl:* 

MATHEMATICS - Seale 
l 

Application forma and 
further details ora avail- 
able from Tno Director of 
Education. Education ne- 


rurther details am evaii- 
abla from Tno Director of 
Ediicstlon. Education ne- 

P artment. Civic Centro. 51 
etor's Squara, Wol- 
verhampton, WV1 1 RR. to 
Wham they should bn re- 
turned within 10 days of 
tlila aUvertlsemont. (8AE 

pleaaai. 

Wolverhampton Is un 
equal opportunity em- 
ployer and vacancies are 
npon tu both soxna. oil 
races and roglstorsd dis- 
abled peopln. 139289) 


Modern Languages 
Heads of Department 


LEICESTERSHIRE 


THE RAWLINS UPPER 
HCIIOOI. AND. 
COMMUNITY COl.I.liCJIi 
l.uunjiboruuiili Ituail, 


re plan 
Ian of 


l.uunliboruunli Ituad. 
Ouurii, Nr. I.ounli borough, 
LalcS. 

In me Lalcsstarsliira plan 
for Ilia organisation or 
sacondaryaducatlon. 

i, Ksfi r .yiJ 8 

II BAD OFO f MAN 

Required Alimiat, . ex- 
norloiicail tasuher tn take 


L'hann or Oorman witli 
courses In C.S.B. . niiu 
Ci.ci.E. 'O' and ~A' loval. 
Alijllty tn loach French tu 
C.H.E.fc} 1 luvel nlulily do- 
nlraliTo. Lively und aiioruo- 
tic todaljar tu cnnsullilstt 
furthar develop a sue 


ilghly do 


..a teeSahes* tu cnnsulltlnta 
end furthar develop a suc- 
cessful department with 
•iroitii high school links. 

Apply. Immediately by 
letter wltli full inirrlruliim 
vltaa snrl the iiiiiiidm and 
nddriiehas nr twn refernes 
to Him Principal. Aiwllra- 
tlnns by talBuliiina w 

r 4%wA^Sr vn ii 


.. LEICESTERSHIRE 

MARTIN HIGH SCHOOL 
Link Rond, Anslny, 
Leicester - 

In the Lalcastorshlra plan 
for the orflsnlsatlqn of 
secondary education. 

"WW 


sttrsollve site an the out-' 
skirts of Swhidon. 

Full da tails of post of 
school can be, obtained from 
the Hendtnogtor isne please) 
to whom applications (no 
forms) should be sent as soon 
as passible (temporary 
appointment for one . year). 


nequireu August or 
January an experl enood 
tenohnr. Muat be cnpsble 
of teaching both French 


and German. 


tlculsre . an 

raw 


r WlLTSHI^B 


1988 , to tench all .Msvsls. 
Strong . Department, • large o 
sKd A Ihvsl entry, -ntany uni; ■ 

odfidldate . With , suitable .«*• 

i^ffRtf. &V&S ’ 11 igkvfe 


ate . with , suitable ,«*• 


tics a^li 
trough a 
. yp ta «nc| 
«vel wo 


an 

."A candidate. wi 

. Mechanics) ■ Would- be pro- 
far able, 'Help with the 
l V°m >lu ^ u bourse In 


S. ysarst N.O. 
n 8th Fdrml 
mastsri-j, 9.< 


r - Hdadmastsr 

& .A. M. Ed. 
squired Si 


SUFFOLK 


CAMUF.I. 

Hl'flOIII. 


WARD UIM'I R 


I'llqlksliilln War. Haverhill 
i Mlxnil viimiir«hensl« » l-t • 
in. 830 till II. ll. I.tn III Mxili 
Fnrni) 

Itoiiiilreil for *ir|*l«imliei , 

I III'. All (IF l.ANliUACI « 
Uiuilo 31 111 ml* pm iMise Iniill 
ilpvnlupllin tipper Si lim >| . 
Si hunt rxi-hanun* PSlabll-liril 
ami a lull rnimo uf a nurses 
available lu * A" lnr| I'rnH h 
nn.l lii'nnmi. 

Tin. Im-al IhiiimIiiii nniliur l<* 
In prepared to ul*n ayinpalhr- 
tie run side ration lo the nrnvt- 
nlon of hounlnn fur tea.-linra. 

C'ulttar t the Hr Jilmomer al 
I lie School Inuurdlalrli liS 
(elrplionr for ilrlnlM 

lllavrrhlll A15III. 

ST. IILNF.DICT S It. t? 

SCIIOOI. 

Ilf-nlnu's Way. Ilury si. 
r«l iiinnrin. 

I Mlxnil > omprnlinualvfk 13 . 

Ifl. 5311 on roll! 

Itmiillreil fur .Mppli-mlinr I'lllJ. 
a IIEAII OF MODI UN I.AN- 
(il.<Alli:S IHi-eln 3 1 Im Inn. ll 
mainly I'rrm ll ni 'O' ami 'A* 
Invrl. Second lanuuailr 
Herman. 

l. oiler of application to l lie 

llradiuiiatrr Immediately- Mu 
fill'llmr tlelalln lalnpllolir tlir 
•rluuil. Durv HI. r.ilniinulx 
3518. 130077) 13.16IH 

WILTSHIRE 

THE IIKADl.ANDH HCIKKII. . 
Crick Inde Ituail. Swluiluu NN2 

ona 

<14. IB yearn: 756 un rnll) 
Headmaster: It. W. Crow. 

Required Sent ember 1983. or 
as mu in as iiimslbl.' thereof - 

I rr . HI: Al i UK MOIlK.ltN 
I.ANIilIAni:h. ulile to idler 
both FRENCH anil (ll'.llMAN 
hrulr 3 npiMtliilninil . 

Latter id applli Itm. 
tonnllinr with names. anil 

nililrassea nf two referees lo 

the H sail mu star. 139486) 
133618 


Scale 2 Posts and above 


BARNET 

LONDON BOROUGH OF 

KfHITEFIELU SCHOOL 
Claremont Rnad, Hendon 

NW 18. 

Tel: 01-455 4114 
Mixed Coniprclieiislvp. Hull 
1015. Sixth Form 161. 
Requlrnd Sautotiibrr 1*188. 
loaclinr of FRRNCil (ability to 
teach Onrman an Bdvniitnqe ■ 
to Jain slriina. well-pii»lppeil 
<38 huatli Lanuuagn l.aliura- 

tory t Dopurtmont. Courses in 
both InnnuuiieH well nxtab- 
llshod up tu A-levnl . I'usnllill- 
ItV uf Mcaln 3 nnnt for still- 
ably axporlmrnd cuiidlilatn . 

In appruvsd cuicn nmltl - 
ones may bo given tuwnrds 
the payment uf removal ex- 
penses and snpsratlon Dim- 
wsnc<* . 

Apply In wrltluu hi HrnU 
Teacher with full r.v. nnd 
names of two referees. 
H.A.E. 1434141 133680 

BEDFORDSHIRE 

NORTHERN AftF.A 
Mil ARN BROOK WI'FKIt 
SCHOOL 

Oilrll Rund. hliernbruiik. finds 
MK44 1 JX 

Headmaster; Mr. i> (Irounds 

T el: llodrurd 78221 I 
3 - IQ ciiinpralinuaive. !IU(I 

Rnijulrod for Septniuber 11182. 
n Tearliar uf Mndrrn Lin- 


Further details (roirl the" 
load. Apply immediately 
np 'formal with full par- - 
iculars . and names and 

mi*™ 0 iwan 


i«tifce end i 
r Be lent Is 


. -.-.biittok : 

. LONDON. BOROUGH 6r 


■tgra. An 
. with Jsoy 


lontfuage tb 0.C.E. 'A* Level, 

a nd_. Oxbridge entrance stun- 
efd. - .-The successful c&ndl- 

main .rorefgn' language taken 


HERTKnUDHHIHK 

I III'NIV l UIINCII. 

I) A* IIIIUM IIIVIMUN 
HKMIt lll'MI'STI: A II 
NtllOlU. 

Dentil l ane. Ilnnrl 
lleinpsleail 

<unn iniaril. I Hit in ni«ih 
F orm > 

Wanieil for ii'iili'inlirr. 1 *182 
a lililMAN Tl Ai 111 II In he 
responallde f ■ n- Hip fieintnii 
I lepnr lllien I , Hi ale J. linrmnn 
Is tanulil fiuiii Year 3 up in 
lllllvr rally an aril |pt P | 

I'rospe. Ilia mm rnrilirr In- 
fnrinaii.iii from llie Hrailnian- 
• fr. . i". whom applli ■Hunt 
Should lie made n» nnnn as 
possible <Nn fnrnisl |352<I8I 
13362(1 


IIUMIIKRNIUE 
K.DIU'A I'llIN III I' A It f MI'N r 
I ASI IlinlNIi HIVI'.IIIN 
llltl1II.INI. I UN HCIIIKIl. 
Itesslmili v Ituail. Hrldlliioluii 
VI ) 1 6 4i)l< 

I Viilinilai y Ihiiilriilled 
I '»i|i!prrl|pnxl»r with luiai'illliu 
f ai lllllnm. N .U.lt I 29111 
I 11l.Nl II I I Aflll.lt Ml Al I-. 3 
Knnnlreil lor Seplrmlier. 
I'lH'J nr Jnniinrv. 1*1113. a well 
•liisllf leil leather id 1 rein li ns 

lie ml nf I >epnr i in nil i . "I here 
are exrelleul mmlcrii fm llltlra 
mill i In- srhin.l'n nrailemtc 
l rail It Inns are well estab- 
lished All pxprrimn eil i nillll- 
■late aide in lest li 1 r«ni li and 
Herman would lie i imslilereil 
fur sulniln I inniil ns Head of 
I’Srlilly l*o nle 4 l. 

Anplit nilou forms and 
fiirliiei ilnlslls nrr nvalalalile 
froiii llie llrml of I lie silntol 

rft.A r jilease | lo wlmlll I- 

Uleleil fiirms sliould he re- 
turn-' ,1 |,v Until May. 1*182. 

C 3*1 1631 1 33 68 <1 


COUNTY frOUNCII. 
BIllICATIUN I >F. I» AWT Ml NT 
MAIDSTONE. DIVISION 
SEN ACHE II IU 11 SCHOOL 
Rullon It nail. Maids I one 
Tel: Maidstone 67 7471 
1IF.AI) C)I ITILNCII 
Roll' 930 Mixed 11 • 1 7 *A 
llnutilrnil lor Srpleinhcr. 
1982 lur ns xiinii ns ponslbiel 
a kern enllnislaalli mill im- 
aiilimt Ive lent her In lek** 
rliarge nf French . in .this 

S lenxmitlv sltnntetl 11 lull 

clllllll oil Die out skirl" of 
Maldnioiie Mmler ll l.aiinuaim 
■ nurses ■ urreiiilv in i*periitt«jii 
lend lu I'HEHiCi: ‘O’ level. A 
hr it In 2 nr 3 post would he 
available lor a suit aid v iinitl • 
Ifled mill expel Inn nl "Ill'll' 
dale. Ahilltt lo oiler n an* olid 
nimlerti lannuaun would lie an 

advnulnqn. 

Apiillriiliinis l(i llie Head- 
mistress with full i iirrlriilnin 
vitae. mimnui 2 referees 
Is. a. el. 1 3934 HI 133620 


UERKSIHrb 


|sr«f-as 


l-tirnpnan Stuflte? m 
xrhnui . ThoVs |,‘ lom! 

"f siime 'A' lsvM^ SSaobUUi 
sul table candidatV 'w 

Con Illy Council !■ 5 ! rk, W, 

DERBYSHIRE 

"ffs& 

lleadiunsisr: T. fhom,, 

r' gatt? i/uasvs 

tvte c %-s”teS 

unnges llepsrtmsat of 

wnrk will Os .vsllxhl.,^ 1 

Furnts from the h,,c 
master *1 tits school unu 
recalpt of 8.A.E. CloStJ 
da in fuurtoen dxyi fral 
Ills appasrsnea or tH 
ndvnrllasmsnt. 

Ilorby shirs Couolf 

C.iiiincir Is an aqual apgor. 
tunily employer. <3lafiu 
1MM1 

DERBYSHIRE 

llOI. MOVER SCHOOL 
Mntiracro Lane, Bpliover. 
Cllentlirflaid 844 fXA 
1 1- 18 mixed comprsheadTS 
N.O. It. 1830 line. 140 lntth 
l-'urm) 

Kur Sept amber, Tiacbtr of 
French. Scale I. 

Letters of appllcstlon will 
l-.v. and details of 8 rel«nq 
to tha Hsadmaiter ILU 

P lease). Derbyshire Couth 
launUl Is sn eatiBi opportui- 
Ity omptoysr. <41185) Him 

DERBYSHIRE 

ANTHONY CELL SCHOOL 
W Irks worth. 

iMJxod Rural CoraprthiHhi 
973, 1 I - 181 

hanks Scale I teacher lor 
Frnncli to 'A' level with ton 
f irrinnn. Lively Dapirlhin 
i nmmilted to languise H 
i nmmuiilintlon and an aodla- 
visual approuch. 

Dntalls forthwith Iroe 
llendmasier. . Anthony 0«U 
Mrhiiul. Wlrkeworlh. Djf- 


SOLIHULL 


Eny cation truMMi rm: 
CULBY OllEEN faCHOOl. 
Sllvnrmern nuad. Nheldnu. 

RrMlraii'rnr Nnulemlier. 1952. 
n leather id i'lllTsi.u Ihiafr 2l. 
in n xs u me rnxliiilisilillliv fur. a 


nunnas. Scale a. Thn xinrpsa- 
rul applicant aliuuld lie aide 
to teach Fra null tliruiighuut 
ha saliool tu pit age and nbll- 

1 y ranuoa. Courses are nalah- 
shml in CUE. '()' anil r A' 
nvel. An ublltty lo tenth ()«■'• 
nan woulil bn un advaninnn 
but nut ossnntlnl. 

Ajinlloatlun forma .. nnd 
further douills from ilia llend- 
muttor. s.n.e. plmisn. I'lcnsn 

a pply Inniinillatelv. _.Ch>l>nu 
aie junn 1st 1052. 1 395 201 

MJfldO 

CORNWALL 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
Tijera la n rnniuvel nxiinuses 

3i:a 

M rIiII: lllOi. 

Nlxtll I' drill I 140 

VE A U c’ r,V : j!'’c‘VK K fK .:V, 

hi: a 1,1: two 

A oraduntu timelier Is in* 
qull'nii lu . t m»i'h . rrniM'li 
tiifbugliout tiitH ll -18 •'(■iii- 
prnTianalvp auiiuni. Teaililiit) 
will be ai:rns» tlm, ability 
runun nnd will Include Nlxth 
I'tirm work for an dtleiiuniely 
qunliflnil anil nxiierlBiicad 
inimlier. Buineonn with 
rnnsonable nxpnrinitnH, wlni is 
nn snlliHiisInath) Frpdcnplille 
nnd has soma orgaiilBBlIuiinl 


lu axsiilite rnxiioiislhlHiv fur n 
a mall, but urqwliiii lanuuaun ile- 
psrimeut. providing ■■ourses for 
nil ithllltina within 11-16 nun 
rsnuo. Ability anil wl llnunrm* 
tu tent'll * second Innuimun 
wiulIU Im an nil v mil non. , 

Application furnix ninl liirili- 
er rintnlls avallabln frum tlm 
llsadiunsler nl llie athonl esnn 
pleaxa) (43405) 133682 


Seals 1 Posts 


AVON COUNTY 

B nWNF.NI) HCIIOIII. „ 

(trill View. Staple lllll. 


DOWNUND *' 
North View. 
Ilrlxiul 
Required fin 


I'tirm work for an rttleiniaiely 
qunliflnil Brnl nxiiBrioiicad 
tfiaoher. Buineonn with 
rnnsonable nxpnrinitnH, who is 
nn snlliHiisinstlu Frencnphlle 
nnd lias same urgaiilsBlIiiiinl 
BUHIty, Is reaulred. 

Flo use apply be letter, In- 
cluding ourrlauluni vltao and 
names and addresses . nf two 
rararesa, to Ilia JlsHilmsHlor. 


CUMBRIA 


sis,, m 

(mixed camprehe,(ialve 11 • IB Uau 


Itequireil fui- Neiilemlmr 1983 

r wntl qiislifiml tem her. of 
roiicli (Hi ale 1) UHeresioi I In 
tear iiln li Brnisa llie abllllv 
rsngr ninl wllli un In l , l" v .. n 
full iiarl In foieluu vlslia 
firaeninnil bv the nioderii inn - 
UllMUes lleiini'lnieul . 

Applli nfliui liy letter the 
llnxil Tent Her nm losliia n rur* 
ilriiliiiit vitae mol ilia nsiues 
iillr ^ii refei erx ns soon aa 

'"WKmid hilllnol Is « lirW 
11 - IH years i rp-ediii sUuilal 
rciunlv spii > ti il« i v m.iioul nncl 
wlYl lie iiiieiilitu in Hpiiuiiuliri 
1 urU on llie niiialunuiniiiiii of 


BEDFOUDBIURK 

«.:«ioni. 

(iutenliuc Ituad, l.utun. beds, 
ifsadinsstsn Mr. T. tumau. 

Tenclinr of I'renrh end (l«r- 
men (MciId i) required fr«m 
Beptembnr 1082. Tu this U, ■ 
16 .mixed srlmui of 700 

~ ‘ TEW? " 


Williams 

er leas, or 


' oamea.woult 
Oge 


(mixed oampreha,itslve 11 * IB 

K-quirad ror" wtemL.r 1083, 
a teacher of Oorman to 'O* 
and 'A' levels, offering 
French to Junior forms. Beale 
a past for suitably sxperl- 
enqed candidate. 

Application by letter to the 
Head giving full curriculum 

Bits or tihs 

advertisement. 

'ESSEX ' 

STEWARDS SCHOOL 
Pernell RoSd, Harlow. CM1B 

School, end to.be reaponslble 
rur Oredad ■ Tosts, foreign 
visits. 

, Curriculum vltsa and names 
of two . referees to Hesd* 

S!KSSf. i (3^gfr“ p 'WUs 

------ - ■ •' ; , ■ 

GLOUdESTERSHUlE 

I mijssm.'- ; 

i'W- ■ Bn/iitU o6nipr short si v* 
1050 on roil) 

Requirsd In . BeOtember, 


to B,,l Ae yxss a 

O.C.n. Bxamlnatliid: .. „„ 

council ■■c«tnntu(latl»n mw 
be dvailable In certiilii i-oers. 

AppiicstKiji Inrmx . arn 
obtalnebie from nnd rnturn- 
auls to t)ie Headmaster at the 

WXKIIi 




CHESHIRE 


OraiUiate 

Le?| l n n j;p' B tf French throuaRou^ 
ihp. School tu A level. 

trees (a.q.e. piaeae). 


DEVON 

plgue sea t 
mint on page 




DORSET 

uillingham bchool 
C illlillfllism. P°r“oifl mlud 
Ccimprrhonslvo: 980 m 
Itiiuuirnd for SepiesW' 
-ramiiiirsry Asslsisni Tiia« 

< tit a In ll. for Fr0 ,l h h r? 

niniurtiinlilaa “P 
AilvoniKil Loval for 
■ iiiiiliilnto. Excellsnl laws 
Inburntury. auillo-viJuil. trf 
.'•• tump f eel Itles avslfiM*. 

Tu rover the ehMBCt « • 
tfui hrr on matornlty I®**?; | l 
lx nxpnrtod lliet the 
merit will hn "UyjmS'L? 
fillip . 1983. PosalWlIW « • 
lirrmanoiil post th 0 r cs f tar. 

K.-JArCTIfflls. 


KNFIEliD 

LONDON UUHOUOII OF 
arnV)h”<tiopl___ 


BEDFORDSHIRE 

lT^Fd , L l yV N lrt0Fl^CliOOL 

! t. Thomas's Rond. Luton. 

ndmullgr: Mr P. llayrtock. 
■Ed. (Hons) _ 

'BS; 

guegea. French is the first 
language taught throughout 


tha schoul and to. the «lij}l B 
range and ability^ or pupil", 
with German ana Spanish algo 


taken. Extornel examinitlont 
lead to 'O* level and CiS.E. A 
Scale 8 post could be ■»■*<- 
able lor e suitably W, 1 !*** 1 * 
and exporlencad candidate. 
Council accommodation may 
bo available In certain imm- 
Application forma ubtaln- 

please). i4813Q» ia**** 


I'ussthilli v «f A rnndW* u ' 

Bf» MV, 'KH 

aiiiisidliii-y fiidio' 

>4 

sniill as IHixsIbl"; k _ ho0L 
ils tra allow Id * t,,e . 0 vfilej 

fp"*r.“ “** 

‘ft 

..itribigltfiffE. 


ESSEX 1 : 

?^MRenSiVE ECIiOOh \ 

OF, 

MSI': 

na si. 

Strung dapartmen 

j 

T^ff fe n5 : 

j£B"paaL 

yllae and H? B dtB«C h,r 


GLOUCESTEftBUlBB. 

FAHMOn'S BC1I0 


fiT^ r ?>ural comprsr 


•■■ssua S i * u ' fablJ f 


■ jiyv^oi^jn uiifAi 1W4F9 ^ ^9''' '■■■ 


smmm *&**•*; 

'• ‘ ,' ' "y, '■.'•■i .‘'V . • -ry- ‘ • 1 ; . . •. ■ 1 . . 

;^ : :r 4>-" -iVi 1 ' ' 

j ’ . : •. v ■?*'* . ^1 E '" «. ■' ' ,h 

ull :;"3 a*»s awA* jr*** *6*6* A«av«» «.«#- a as. *u-I 'flsi'i...'. ■ .' 1 1 i-J- / l f * i' i 1 > v 


i»aW'x , Yin.ivi3r.’#'9i<ij' v,| ?1 j |( .. 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21 . 5.82 


asssss 1 

fontmasd 

QVENT 

Sa fSd^V-di dol ju n io r 

COMPREHENSIVE 

SCHOOL 

&inu?nED FOR 1st Sapcem- 
Lr 1M8. Appllcatinns ors ln- 
rr.,,1 from q uul If lad tuficlrors 
<nr the rollowliin vacanrlrH:- 
wiii qualified teacher who Is 
■iia able lu leach somu Eu- 
Suih. Willlnnnoss lo uxsist 
wjlh flames nn added quui- 

11 Application (urnis and 
furlhsr hiftirinnllpn whirre 
■vsllibla. ohlulnublo fi-nni the 
mrretor af Edui.ni Inn. County 
Hilt, Cwmbran. Ownnt. NP44 
jvg, an receipt or a.u.a.. 
Thmiid bo rn turned lo tli., 


HERTFORDSHIRE 

mmm 

i? is® 

lo *|cb E . 1 *• 0 ,,U eiS^ 1 ■ ' 

fir' l*SSP cirrict? 


nildrnsxi.s 

1330461 


am| V,, A CUrr lcu- 
anu namaa nnd 

f two r ora reel. 
— 1 Sanaa 


HUMBERSIDE iivoo« — 

plW»r, nBVar 

|™ Visa 0 r™««'.*b".s ‘ >° r "i 

^sM-> ’‘ ,h M " iiSSSi WjSL.-ffa: 


yaara). 
Th,B <» 
Hanoi co 

roll™ W1 


jE re ' t .«funaaffi W wffit HERTFORDSHIRE 

Dir? "io* * 'a? Kdu”s D un ! ^ oii u t C 

HslI. Cwmbran. Ownnt. NP4 4 ADBYFIELD Sciiool j fInP7 _ nn 

aXG, an roceipt of a.u.o., Lonnlaim*, Homal H.mn . ^ K 1 RKLEES 

should be rnluruetl to tint Horts. ““*nsi Hempstead. 

wfaBbif’ '“iiSass ssarw.-a-——. ... 

S^aESFWnt mdiAknir 

owekt 

SSS ,f®SrS 


QffEPfT 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

S^PREHENSIVE HCIINOL 
Riwport 

FRENCH AND HERMAN 
REQUIRED POR 1st heptein* 
btr I9B3. 

Applications am invlind 
iron qualified inarhnra fur 
ru folia wlnn vnfmirins:- 
Cradualo lo laacli III ynnrn 1 
u S up to examliiiitltm stall- 
dghl. 

Application rurnis and 
(srlnar rnlormatiou where 
atallabla. obtainable frum the 
Director at Education, County 
Hall. Cwmbran. Gwent. NP44 • 
2X0. an receipt of x.u.e.. 
should be returned to thu 
Headmaster, by iho 4th Junii, 
I9B2. (3B3081 13362d 


HAMPSHIRE 

K ORNDEN SCHOOL 
ochaatsr Road. Chandler 'a 
Ford 

11 • 16 Camp, mixed 
N.O. It. 1330 

French to 'O' Invnl will) 
Latin. 

Letter of application Im. 
mdlaiely to »lcadt(iurh»r. 

with full curriculum vitnn, 
l»o raforeos nnd S.A.E. 

13931 fl ) 133682 


HAMPSHIRE 

OREAT SALTERN H SCHOOL 

uirrni, Portsmouth. f03 6pz 

f^. ra ^l f 58 0 o n „• l ?SlI MI,,,, ‘ , 12 - 

Required Saptemiinr. 1 9a 2 

French L n T ®ACHJJH Ol- 
FRENCH - To wurk In mnln 
«tafl « p -io GCE ■<)■ level. 
Apply by Ininr tn Ilfud 
vllim/9 rnfnmix) 
iiSoiliu k.A.li. im- uckiiii w> 
l^ent „,d dnUdjs. 


havering 

Jg^BGROllUlt Ol 

Sp^RMlfe. * to,n ^ rd ' 

uiVt’ 000 * 

SSirMs'. J -''- 

Sttlfe * Site! 

ig^tssja 

AfluM a i,B ■ "lyi'lit lit 

-^hfeissrayvn,*' 1 " ,i " 

1 33622 


.COUNTY CUUNl.'ll. 


S* ,N,TV 


tasssss 

further, 


*Sf.' r ' is 





").!!, ::s 






WnuPnf-M. 

Apply as soon aS pM., bl( . 

rl'c i! u H v l°t a?* "Jn ‘n W 1 ^ c ^‘“ 
Utlilrcihnn or V* n °J n 5* * n d 

f..rtliar ,| a ,a,{r° avauKu - 

aM® 1 — & 

AM °- 

13352a 


HILLINGDON 

‘■ ON 1SMSg8aS H OF 

rIv H ?! >SHALT SCHOOL 

""■'fftWa - 

...gfinulr-d for Septombor 

FroneR C *to' Q ° n blB Ad *v° 

prttw 

, Bst “1*11 shed 
links with Francs 
nntl Giirmuny. 111,0 

ll lh hopocJ to npnolnt b 
tear ha r who will maka a 

IrhU^I : . 0,,lp,but,on lo the 
" e *trn curricular 
attivitlex. Outer London 
Allowance Payable. 

1,1 writing to tha 
llnndninscnr nlvlnq brief 

I'Drnnr details mid the 

nn hi on and adriressss of 
Iwn rofnri-nx. (39843) 

- 133638 


HOUNSLOW 

i!i!i %Wr onn SCHOOL 

l"!: 01-360 4456.. 

ILmd Taui-hpr: Mrs. M. Hurdy 

■ F.'.rm.’ 1 w,t " 137 *'* 

, iV.’S.V' rn, i T Hnntonibar 
A Tear liar uf Garmnii 
iiliij I rrui'li (Hrtilc l) tu loin a' 

Wfll i>Ht, lllllHln.il II, id D nil III- 

sl.ixlli iii'iijri mnnt . Goad 

in ll■l•■mi•' ■uiQjinuilluna and 
sin i mssIui tiiii. liliui iiximrlnm o 
•it •• i'nxi'iii lal Thi* Hurcanaful 
ni'Pllra ii i trill liuvn ojiporlun- 

Iruni ttu. Third Year lu (ho 
l/lMX'r Mxlli mill in toncli 
l ,|* 1,, . , ,k ,n lim l.utvor and Mld- 
>lln Nrhiuiln. 

fi'imMl lur Girls 
la n nlxtli-iiirin lim ry t'nmpra- 
lirnslvp hi imui xltiinlnd m u 
■liilnl arnn in II run t fiii'il unil 
wiih ii< ir nl 11,1,11!. io cnntrnl 
1 (lull. 

Luliiliin AlluwaiH'ii £4118 

ilsln 381 ri Mny 

l.eitnr*i uf iiunlli ullun ulv- 
iiiu ilntai In ul i-iirrlt,u)iini vltnr 
iilul (uiiiinx ,iii,l nihlrhsanx uf 2 
i qtm ffh Hlititilil lu. hi*ii I tn the 
I T"4i hnr. <350431 I 3.1638 


KIRKLEES 

MET RaPaLrTAN NORTH YORKSHIRE 

®. h V r 9 I i R , TH HIOH «™Sol SSK¥, t n '® nc,l 

ffipraSHB®' v'fS% 

S iSS® 

• LEICESTERSHIRE Jg 

»“WS ff“« 

Cotea Rood. Dirmu. - 133628 


LEICESTERSHIRE 

HUMPHREY PERKINS 

CotQs Hoad, D arrow on 
Buar. Loughborough. 

In rni‘1i5; e,c ““”^ Bhl « 1 “ Plan 
*}*• orgardaation o? 
secondary education. 

High 11-14 
Roll 870 

FRENCH 
Scale 1 

sta?e qUi r n*ti£ llBUat ' Flsaas 
offered. ° th " r •“«««■ 

Hnnrf^ detalla from the 

Bn } namoa and 
(eaa rq *?a Sb? 4 , two TOM 


LINCOLNSHIRE 

IcHOOL ° ORAMMA « ' 

Voluntary Aided. 650 boys 

to f ? 0 P sch qlk^AN 
xu ba&"y French. 
guelLGeU teacher 'with 0 experl* 

Please apply by latter, giv- 
ing Tull detalla snd naming 
two refereea, to tha Headmii- 
lor ?t. (be school as toon as 
possible. <478611 135632 


LINCOLNSHIRE • 

SPALDING HIOH SCHOOL 
FOR GIRLS 
Roll 680 

throughout the Schbol. to 
O nnd 'A' levels. 160 In 
the Sixth form. First 
appointment nppllcstlohs 
welcome, 

.. Pbrms and details from 
the Ileadmlstreas at the 


NORTH YORKSHIRE 

.^g$rD«BB8ai: 

Vork Y&V^LY all,t,H, ° n Ll,no ' 

(1000 pupils if « . 

comprehenaivi) 18 1711x011 

«n Aa2i«B r n?" pl 5 mb £ p 1 a t 

SKsMWarS 

^.SWaia: 

JeseaV. < ij&fy 


NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

w fe 5 X&“A&®ggS OOE . 
p H .KfSo?S;S( PE8 d JI' a 

icsie i) iq the Languegea 


(scale ]) In- the Languages 
Department, of this 13"“ 
co-oducxtiqnal -upper 

d 1 mh.{ 8 » ro, D set. in 
plaaeanl- rural aurround- 


. The DepartmanL la 

».nVf.. o :jo5 u ^,fi! 

IfAht.HVVel, SS-p^SB 

ana European Studies. 

^ | W?* u ctiasru I applicant 

A n .n5 W r^ <d ‘P tssali 
A, O end CSJ3 courses at 
Sr .K“u; BVBlB ' Foss Ibil Ity 
gusfl* hlllB * •■**•*<* 


r’orolpt' bf” SAH, to whom 
forms should ba returned 


_ Apply (no farms) ta the 

JSSS^ar t°u r ^ 


■ nil ilMinun hi « 11, r 
■lllll flrilllnx ,111, 1 nil 

t O ll' I FFN H lit, lllll III' 

lli'iiil T"di ni>r. liO 


KENT 

c.oj'N ry roi'Ncu. 

I'lllll A'rrilN Dri'AItTMl'.NT 
DAIUlTlItn IIIVIHlDN 1 
ItWANI.CY .HCHOtlL _ 

Mwiiulry. Kim!. 11 It H 7 Tli 
TalKiili'iiiic hwnnley 65231 
l.sinltllxliml Inrue 
Uiiiuurniimisivn Ki'huul wllli 11 
full rluiu*' liilnkn. mlxnd, II- 


HOOL , , 
Abingdon, 


OXFORDSHIRE . . • • 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

LINCOLNSHIRE FITZHArryb school , 

Horthoourl Road, Abingdon, 

CAISi'bR GRAMMAR Roll: 1070 

SCHOOL Raqulrsii from September 

Cnlitar, Lincoln. LN7 6QJ 1 J 8 3 ■ iwp graduate teachers 

Orgup ■ Roll 339 or pronoh, one • Permennent 

11 - 18. Ca-Bducatlonal, P"“. one. -temporary for et 

Sglactlvo with 80 boarders y*6r due to aecond- 

Tslephune 0472 881 250.- msiit. Some Oermsn could be 
available but is not essential. 
Graduate required - to There m-se stem lalted ' A'. 'O* 

tonch mainly FRENCH. ' an 5 C.S.E. courses In French 
Hcslo 1. Second teaching “"a Oarmen and a C.S.E. 

subject an lntaroat In.autar 1 |Sr??, M J!. ,t 4 || ! I M course.. The 


full frum*' liilnkn. inlxnd, 11- 
1H, Limdiiii Frliinn Allnwancn. 
Ituqiilrrii iii Hnplemheri 
Tnnclinr or (Inrmati. tn C.S.C. 
'O' and 'A' Irvpl. Ability tu 
linill with I.nwni 1 ai'honl 
l-'fniirii vvniild lie nn nsxiit. 

, A 111,1 lint inn lx liy latter to 
lim Ifiindiiinxtnr nt (He soliool, 
nsiiiiitu I'nfarniiH und giving 
unlutls. 


apbject'an .1 n taroat 


Glass activiuv" n„, ■» 

Important. If possible we 
liopo to appoint a single 
teacher ta live in and help 
with the boarding side at. 
thn school. 

Apply to the Head by. 
Intier naming two refereea 
es aoon-. sa nqeajhie, 
(5831 S) 1 83632 


1 takes part lii the- 
isms snd has reou- 
es with schools In 


t er exchanges with schools In 
'rsnes snd Germany. 

Apply -.giving details- or 
quenflesUons and experience 
together with the nomas and 
addresses of two rarer* of, as 
aoan as poaslbls to Uie Hesd- 

IIb»Y> - : rim 


uraviiniiam niviHioN 

Tfl AM lib VIEW tadllOOL ‘ 

1 nonu Lhiif, Oruvosnnil, 

Kant. DA 1 3 4LI- 
linsilmastrr - M. Uuwers, 

II. A. ((irnup 4). 
linn Hired frum 1st September, 
1UH2, tnurhnr nf Frnncn, 
Ni itln |. Till. kiiDWlKdge of au« 
■llu-vlHual tnnLhltiD methods 
vyiiulil bn an ndvnmaiie. end 
thnro Is thn possibility or 
soiiip European tHuilles 
tBsrhlnn nx well ns French. 

. Tlumusvlew school opened 
In Nentnnibfir. 1968. In new 
|iu)iiisn built acriimmnilstlon 
nntt Hprvcit n Inrqn private 
Itnuxlito amine In n pleasant 
area rin thn past of . 
Oravesnnil. The sohuol Is a 
11-17 mixed High School or 
1 950 pud 1 1 x within the 


»hire 

35 %gt^? Bn " 


1930 pupils within the 
Thdinns-sKIn aystem of aacon- 
aniy education. There Is a 
a mu II Sixth Veer. Tliamesvlow 
arhuui offers □ wide range of 
C.S.E. und ri.C.B. ‘O' level 
courses. 

_ Aupiiratlun forms ana 
furtlinr rinalh may bs 
Oblalnrd from the Huailinaster 
at tils Si'luxii <",s.n. please), 

t u whom they should bn.ro- 
nrrind as sunn as pnsxble. 
AHI(l’C)llI) DIVISION 
DUGAN BOWCN SCIIOOI. 
Utnillluile Hund. Asllfurd. 

Kftin 

Hnqulri'il Seplrmbnr , French 
"pni'lallnt (m'slt ll. to lesrli 
mainly in Lower Hchuul. 

Apulicnlltinii by latter pr 
form ■lemlnu 2 lefernns tp the ■ 
Hffadmnxtnr. 

MflLPIVAY DIViniON - „ 

PENT VAI.I.I'.Y HCIIOOl.' 

S rtlkoxliMln . : ’ . 

ifiililrrd fur Benlembnr. 
1982, A tcnrhrr uf French 
< sen In tl. prefers lily With F.n- 
Hllah sa a "Pinn<l subjeil. 

Apply by latter 
Headmaster. 1'eui Valley 
Wninmjary Hchuul, Hurreitaen 

■femiAirthmi*' 1 soft 


City of Coventry 

Lyng Hall Girls' Comprehensive School, 
Blackberry Lane CV23JS(1520 on roll) 

Assistant Teacher- 
French 

Required September 1982, Asai^lantTsadwr for ! : 
FRENCH ihroiiBhoutilw school to examination level, . 
Scale 1 , or2 available for suitable appllcanl. Ability to - 

i—i. nenu AW an odvanlflfla. ' 





OXFORDSHIRE 

Sofl 8ao Av,,n,JB ' Hlc sstar 
("ssptombBr'fgflx required 

be a ln Bnatlsh would 

Apply by ^Sffe , 2 eT, "JlS.?* ,, ? n ' 


SHEFFIELD 

iSo 1 '5FD U " B l ‘'‘ na ‘ **■»•«». 

SSiVF/- Wsarts 

sSIS'l 1, w,Ui 
EKs^gyati. /ATTvaiiaijia 

‘ft* Head tr sell nr IO to 

SSI wlflTlr ’a °woeka b aF ffa* 

menl* P c°f B 32 3) “ rt ^l Si 


WALSALL METROPOLITAN BOROUGH 
EDUCATION COMMITTEE 

All the following posts are required for September, 1 982 

TEACHER ^ffiG D Y ESIGNAND 

- ,uauan - - 51 - 

PHYSICAL EDUCATION TEACHER 
TEACHER OF GEOGRAPHY 

(Seale 2} 

responsibility fnatMb defwrinS . 


■-«^®asssas6«. 

HEAD OF ART DEPARTMENT 

(Seale 4) 

Frank F. Harrison Comprehensive School 
Leamore Lane, Leamore, Walsall WS2 7NR 
WELL-QUALIFIED 
TEACHER OF FRENCH 

(Seale 1 ) 

D Jiff* Comprehensive School 
FelsallLane, Rushall, Walsall WS 4 1NG 

TEACHER OF DRAMA 

(Scale 1) ; 

AnhllAAlInnA Aba Lfe.4l> J I_. E- ta 


Apply Py letter giving full detaUs <age,- - . 

qualifications, expSilenoe) ‘and names and;;. 

. addreswaoftwoeducatlortalrefereeato •; 

the Head Teacher at the school wHhln-IO . ;• ... . t; ! 

annaamAAf) /if AdYSrHsAmSflL' .' 


subjBdjrjvei s^Ject Is welloalabJIshed In the curriculum and 
Utewhool possesses a vrell-equippBd.pufpose -built Drama : 

GRADUATE TEACHER OF 
MATHEMATICS 

- • (Scale 1 ) * 

fiSSSgS to wtemal examination revel. An [merest in TV 
level Stallstics would be an elided recommendation. 

1 / Snoyd Comprehensive School 
Vernon WaySnayd^ne, Bloxwloh, Walsall 
TEACHER OF CbMPUTER STUDIES 

■ , (Sfislel) . 

aasscBStessa^ ■ : 

, , t I'f:2 ll8 ^ C l 0 . n, P roh9na,v ® s:ot 'o6l 
Uchite l Road, Bloxwloh, Walsall WS 3 3LU 

SECOND IN ENGLISH DEPARTMENT 

(Scate 3 ) ■ 

AnouteUmUng and energetic teacher required to play a major 
leaaUo’O* level. ' . 

tha nameaand addressee of two referees and enclosing an 


. Gazebo Theatre-ln-Educatlon Company 
Walsall Education Committee requires 

TEACHER/ACTOR 

. (Equltymertiber) 

To vtork with the <^»ve Theatre Company fro in September. 
Apptoartte should bp qualified teachers who have satisfactorily 
completed their proballonary year. 

e..Uluu4>Llla .. 


fcuuwwvi , Wl nuvfliNis, ummui qiiwn, YvaiSHii wgi i 

to whom they shourd be returned. 

Closing date for all the above Vaca notes: let June, 1882. 
This Authority Is an aqua! opportunity ertployar. 








SEC MODERN 
LANGUAGES 

continued 

SHEFFIELD 
citv or siiEFimn 

EDUCATION DEPAUTM EN1 
YE WLAN DS SCHOOL 
CreavvIrK Larin. Sheffield. bSU 
3NN . 

un 11-18 See. 

Tteqti trail Tor Si-pliiinbnr. 
1 BBS. n tenrher ill 1 -roneli. 

St ApHlIrntliiii (onus .. arid 
runner ilrtoll* art; nvallalilu 
rrom tho Head Timelier lu 
wlmm HWV slimiltl Ur rn- 
turned wltliln 3 week* nl thn 
appenrnnri- of iliif advrrllHO- 
rnfmi- (ABA3 I > 


SHEFFIELD 

CITV OF Hit F FI-' I ELI) 
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
KINCi EDWAlin VII Hl.'IIIItll. 
(ilatiup llaaii. HluifNi'lil. Mil) 

arw 

Hnauirnil fnr Snnii’inlior. 
1982. n lourlior uf I-rniu h 
able and wllllna tu tiuu'li 
FrAiirh thru ugli uut Ih" biIiooI 
In a riegurtment wlinrrt i-miili- 
naira Ik put un Hid hub of 
French lor lorumunlrin Uin In 
the classroom. The pnrnon 
appointed vwoulil bo nxpurt.ni] 
to participate fully In the 


rl«lti entl study cuursrn unit- 
niena by the Department. If 
at nil possible, cun dinette a 


'• : •' 


should also offor Spanish an a 
second RiiblPL'I. .Scale 1. 

AppllrutliMi I tii'ins and 

furl Her (Inlillii* urn uv n 1 1 uli I p 
from MU' Hr ml Tear her In 
whom they should hn rr- 
turned tviMiln 2 iviinki nf ihr 
appearance uf illin nilvertlin. 
ineni. (3B.*»0«> 1330 82 


SHEFFIELD 

CITV OF SHEFFIELD 
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
MYERS GROVE SCHOOL 
Wood lane, B6 5HG 
Required ror September. 
IBB3. a teacher al French to 
toacli thronahout the school. 
Beale I . 

Application rormi and 
further details are available 
Tram (ha liaadtoaclier to 
wham they should be re- 
turned within 2 weeks nf the 
apposrajicB of this advertise- 
ment. 1389041 133622 


SHROPSHIRE 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
PRIORY SCHOOL 
Lonuden Road. Shrewsbury. 

Required September. 

GRADUATE to teach RUS- 
SIAN (Beale 1. part-timol ■ al 
Priory School end at Shrews- 
bury Sixth Form Callpan. 

Apply direct to Headmis- 
tress ut Schoul, nlvlnu curri- 
culum vitae and names of two 
roteraas, (38302) 133622 


STAFFORDSHIRE 

Cu jn l lorjfti r il Rtiacl, Turn worth 

RciuiVnil . . for Hi-tneinlior. 
1 11112 lit thin il«vn|<i|iliii| ruin' 

f irnhcnsive hcIhioI, well niini- 
[loan TEACH FII or kiilnc-h 
(S oul* II. PleaHu slain muuiul 


Hub) art. 

Applied linn forms otiialn- 
ablo (rain anil returnable tu 
thn llnailiiiarher <n.a.e.l. 

All nupl Iran ts ara naked tu 
note that It in Cuuniy Cmtn- 

f 11‘a view that it In don Iruliln 
or tlidlr einultiyeen to bn 
mo mb ora uf an apprnrprlntn . 

Trnde U'lUm. (3H4SE) 133623 


‘hd 

; & 

'■tl ■ , V 

Mfc 


STAFFORDSHIRE 

fi llRlX^nouK Ht.Honi 

iadnoarnrd Road. Can 


Camiiu-k. 

H nil tomb or ■ 


ilanull'eiT lor . Hniitnmbor, 
1BR3 a well-nuitLiritiil lesclmr 
of PUUNCII tfloalo 1) tu. ax- 

S m iiintlon level, m this fully 
nvo loped .. uumpriilinnalvp 

nclioul. GandUlutea ralmulu In* 
Qleotn which euhxldiai-y oub- 
ifiut they would he Inierontud 
In U'nrhliin. ' 

FilrlhDt- del nils uno appllra- 
tlan fornij are utitalunhfr 
from tlin Headmaster (M.n.e.) 
•tl» vtrlMim they nlMMlltl hn rn- 


eadinaster (rt.n.c.l 
liny * III) l lid hn re- 


STAFFORDSHIRE 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 

NETHER S rOVVC 

COM I'll Ell KNSIVE MillllOI. 

St Cliail'M It .nut. I.lihf Irlil. 
WSl.t 7 Nil 

Uvnulrnil from Heptemln-v 
i naa. ■» i'aciif.k hi- mod- 
ern LA NCI I* AGES iSrnli’ I l 
In I hid well-uqulpi*ncl. pur- 
pose hill It. mixed L-oiiMirolii-n- 
h 1 vo ki-himl. Tin- apiuilim'i- 
will be oxpiM'tml to teaili 

Fi-oiu-h tliriiiiulKiiit lli« hi it in il , 
ultlm niely to Ail vti m i-d l.itvrl. 
In ii nlninii. well resimri rtl 
liiipar tinen i which uki-h ii Inn- 
11 llRfie loliui-ulnrv iim nil Inli-u- 
rnl part If Hn litm-ldii't. Abil- 
ity in ulfer (irnnun wiiultl h« 
nil utl van t uno but h nut on 
nnscntlal iiimlUli ration uf n|<- 

plli-atiini. 

Al'pllrul Inn fm-niK mid 
tlirtElni' ilrtUllK Irom III" lleml- 
inustrr (ra.n.i- > in whom i t mi - 
pie ted nop II' ii Ilmira kIiiiiiIiI hr 
ri'tur ileil. 

All miplli nut*. ("■«■ uHt.nl tu 
mile Hint it I* Itn- ('uiiiitt 
Cuuc'll " s* view lliui it is il-'«lr- 
ii hli' tor tliidi- nm pliivi * m i" hi- 
ineniber-i uf mi ni-prunrlntc- 
Trad" Unlun. t3»4’»Ai 133 ft 2 'J 

SUTTON 

LONDON HOROt'till OF 
HUTTON 

CAHS11ALTON HIGH 
SCHOOL FOR ClIRI.h 
WdhI mriict, ('iirNlin Id hi. 
Surrey 

(II - 18 yonrsl 

Required for Septenibnr 1082. 
a woU-nunllflnd learhrr of 
F re mil The -»uli|i-rt In i-iiin- 
plilsorv In t lie luiiliir hi ln>nl 
unit Ik ii pcipillnr 1111111111 nl 
lunrtli ynn- li-vi-l. "I lin hi»i - 

ITHHflll IlllllliCilllt Will 111- II-- 

■ inlri-il in tiinih i:si-.. tif'l. '()' 
nnd ' A‘ levels. 


I'li'nsn an ply In wrlilun. 
nlvlnu riirrlLiiluui vltne nnd 
tliu 1 ■ ami< h ami mlilrfiwcti nl 


two roforomi, to the Head* 
teacher at the school- (3-1619) 
133623 

TRAFFORD 

METROPOLITAN BOROUGH 
OF TRAFFORD 

S DUCATION DEPARTMENT 
ALE GRAMMAR SCHOOL 
FOR OIRLS 

Moral and Road, Sale M33 
3NH 

061-073 3217 
FRENCH SCALE 1. 

Required Soptombnr 1083 to 
tooch French tn nt least 'O 
jovul and prcfernbly tu A' 
laval. CnndldatnN nhoiilil be 
ablo to offer another fureinn 
lunnuane. 

Apnllcnntn should tolephnna 
til a Kiiadnilnti'aNa Imnimllatn- 
ly. 140038) 133622 

WILTSHIRE 
CHURCH FIELDS SCHOOL 
Solcomha Ornva, Swlnduii 
SN3 1ER 

(11-18 years : 1330 nn roll) 
Headmaster: VV. u. oleed 
RequCrad September I9B2 
TEACHER, Scalp 1 for MOD- 
ERN LANGUAGES (French 
arid Dorman), able to olfer 
additionally, any or thn lol- 
lowiim: History. Ooourapliy. 

Coin 1 ncri:ii. or R.E. 

Let tarn uf niiplh-atliiii, 
toriotliur with ri'h-rDiin-t, and 
r.v. tu Hie Hendniiinti-r. nt tin- 
Kclidol. 1 3 HP 32 1 I33Q2 2 

WILTSHIRE 

EDUCATION COMMIT!:); 

DOHA? AN SCHOOL 

hi. 1*ii ul n Drive, ('ovlunhnin. 


hi. Puul'n Drive, ('ovluiihain. 
Ilnii'iKiiusti'r: Edward Walls 


REOblHED FOR SEPTEM- 

Mc..\5t?tl« tl thS 


French (Scnle 1) fa toauh the 
subjoot up tu 'A* luvnl. Title 
(a a purpose built. uompreliPn- 
alvo tn a vary plnnaant ureu 
nnd With u lively and rntei— 

B rlslnu Modern l.iinuuaunn 

nuarlniunt. 

Full datulla nr piwl of 
Heltoal can Un ulitulneil front 
thn lleml pins l nr (sac piunHiil 


alvn In a. v 
nnd witli u 


iry pi 11 ran 
lively un 
deru L> 


In, wl 
forniM) 
its pnsi 


Iteiidiunslnr (sac pin nan I 
wliuin itppl lent Iona (no 
im) alimild Uo sent qn nami) 
iisslbla. (3130HI 133632 


.turned u> luun us puaallilc. 
All uuiillriiiits . are. oaknii tu 
note I lint It In.iIih Couitty 
Uciiinull'a vfiiw Hist 11 is dr- 
slralne [or their emnluyees ir> 


SURREY 

ii? tuffi Vw?.? (nn,lk<Mnn ■ 

_a r.nM AN taacheP ' 
.Anitla '1 or, 2 for BKpnrlanc«u 
tBpcher. , to teaeli tb at toast 
OCC levol. _ 


Education 

Required for September 


Music 

Heads oi Department 

CORNWALL “ ” _ 

ltntlCATlflN COMMimil 
There 18 n re move I eKiinnues 

?*l:r3?ficii mci idol 

WMt iar 

clrouin li . _ 

N«i un llqll 1 1390 
ilnaUtUBclirtri Mr. T.M. 







lawf 


mi 


’Teacher L, 

; gert 

■ : ?-v ■ I' v.-~f 'V-' 

A '-Scale & post ia available 'for eeiJHab [yax^eTi^nce d 
; candWaiejIn addition. tq te^hlpg dutl^e « is hoped that , 

> there WilK-bs, opportUmHaa . for enapnrttiw:! plpyirig .In 
; ■ 
Appftoatio^ romnand further detaiw efallabio (6«e) 

. from the Olreotor Education (Rftf 829). CourtJV 
Hell. Weet Brldgfora, Nbttlhflheni NQ2 7QP. *• v 
Cidslng qate: ;4th June. 1982. ‘ ; 

: ’’ CMiiPMBQ/ = ; - ‘i.-. V ■ ;.-r . 

' ml m ■ La ■*; v rCobltlfc Wl.Wfil BrldfllofiJ /■ ." 

Elinia ii*v mi itTrfi 


CAMnillDGESlIIRK 

NOKTIILKN AREA 
IICAI.'ONH'S HCIIOOI. 

( Viiliinlurv t'i’iitriill.'il. I I • 

111 itiiinprrlieiMlvp) 

Oui- mm iianliiiM. 

Pole i- li< ii-uimli . 

Tel: I'c 1 1 'rliiiriiiinli 62411 
I lend Mill! it - Mr M.W. 
l'ai klu . M. A . 

RF.Ul'IHI'.l) l-Dll 
SEPIT'MIIEH. I!lfU. 

Hl:.\l) OF MUSIC 
DEPARTMENT - Si ali-3 
An niilliiiii'diiitth mid writ 
qoiillfle.t imruiii Is liu.kril for 
who will ninlrit nln llir 
-.ill uni's li-iidllliin of hlnli 

ntandni'dii. A aiimll nmoiiiil ol 
i ciii-Iii un nth it tn nn Mind, 
will hn ruijiilr.-il - |i|caHn Htnte 
sm mid siihlei'i IBt. 

I'he arlnxil h.iv Kirillin irndl- 
tloii In Musi, mill iliri-n Is an 
■•vaclleiil ui'u MiikIi- niiiu- 
<-i|nl|ip-'il lo a hlnli Klniiiliird. 

I’lihKlIallM v ill iMKlKl.uirr 
wllll Iii-iikIiiii III npiiro|ii-|iil-- 

I- ||Kf-N. 

Ii-Uitk nl mi |>I I ■ nt 1 1 in im. 
I ■ i riii a i w lili i urrii ■■ linn « line 
•mil tin- iiiiiiii'-i mill iidilri-Kii-K 
lil I wo ii-frri'i-K Klniiilil hr 
Kent in ilu- Mr mini iik | it. Im- 
m i-itlin»lv. 1 433119) 1331118 

HOUNSLOW 

Tin: HI: A Tl 1 1. A Nil SCIIIlOt. 
Wei 1 1 mi ton Rond Situlh. 
llonnaliiw. Miclria. 

Tel: 1)1 -:i73 441 I 

HEAD: flonffrov .1. Snniunl. 

.I.P.. M.A. 

Roll .1440 ilittludlnii Ath Fund 
•if 2181 

Rnqiilrncl lor Boptemher IQ 8 B 
ur inniiarv 1<IR3 fur tlibi i-luin 
loi-ni i-nli-y iiilKi'il lumi'rrlinl- 

■i I V Kl'lllllll Will' ll ■ 1 III- IIOI I III 

I *173 anil which l« hIIiihii-iI on 
l fell- eilile nl IIuiiiikIiiw I ■•"*1 ti 
IlIHl'rlDU OF MUMC. 

hi ,ili> j , 

Tu Iciii Ii to ’A' Ir-vnl unit 
mnimnln Music nn n nm)ur 
furi-r In Him III" uf thn mlionl. 
The ilnpurtmoiii hna pxcolloiit 
fui'llltlos and potential In nil 
uspoiMa of iniialc nilui-allnni a 
musician is sounht with u 
llvaly approach to rlasswork. 
extra-curricular activlilea and 
acndsmle davolopniant. 

Houaed In a fully oqulpped 
suits or classrooms and prac- 
tice rooms, ths department Is 
supported by a Irum of nlno 
vlsiiinn instr unantal 


ALLOWANCE: 


vlalllui) 

Tenchers. 

L4^ N p n ,P N 


Letlora or appllratlon (nn 
forms) within 7 ilnys tn tile 
Head olvlna dotalls nf qual- 
If lent la us rand thn names nf 
two referees. (38779) 1338 18 


COUNTY COUNCIL 
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
TUNnkinaF. wells 
DIVISION 

B LINNET MEMORIAL C.E. 
(AIDED DIOCESAN GIRLS' 
SCHOOL 

Cnlvordan Down. Tunrbldue 
Wells. Kant 
Roll 965 

Raqulrad for September, 
1 0H2 tor .January. 1983) 
HEAD OF MUSIC Scale 3. An 


It. hi il a. nn 

nuthualuiU- 


tenrhnr la reiiiilrcd Ip run- 
Untie Ihr developmont of this 
rletinrl muni tn Its full puinn- 
I Ini. There Is i-unHlilerahlii 
rhijriil null Instriuneiiliil wm-k 
nlrrndy In t» Nrliiml and i-Iiisi- 


tlnue Ihr developmonl 
detiarl umnl tn Its fill 
I Ini. There Is i-ihih 


■nont of this 
i full puinn- 
■-uiiNlilerahlii 


<-<i-uiir rut lun In maintained 
with tlranm prudm-tluu. The 
Si-honl has a new snnelnllHl 
iiiuidr suite IiiiTmlluii in-nct Ire 

l-lllllllM. 

I'lKiHr itpplv hy letter urtlj 
(imi furmsj nl vltiii lull ciirrh u- 
luun vltue mill the unmos anil 
uddresans nf iwn puil osaluilSl 
rurnrsaa to tlin llnadmlatresn. 
Appiicants are welcome .tn 
tulePlioiin tile Uihuul fur 

WEST SUSSEX 

TIIR 1IOUKNU 

wiMi'ii fin F.NSivi; wcuuni. 

I’ui'K 111 •iiri. Nnuthlimii-nn, 

Liiuiuri’hi'iiMlre/cluirtiminlty 
Huliunl. (.roup 01 
(teuulred SeptniiiiK-i- 1!)82. 
Hand of Miislr Nrnle 2. PIiuihv 


im-imil siiUluul iitfnrrOi 


nl Urnma iir fiiiullsh nn 


iicAD PF WfllfllO HC.'ALi: 3. 
RpqiiTred for HeplnlnUor ItlRB. 
a Hand 'nr Muslr • to . lip re. 
Plianslbla for in u rale ttirnunli- 
out tho icbonl, ■ ' 

. Q.C.B.' C.WK. and iMmli 
ated.Dqard «xBpilnatlons lira 
taka it .and pupils pnrltAinato 
In the County , Youth aranea- 


HERTF0RD8HIRE 

V Y -.t6.U NpJ t , 


KENT 

CIIIINI'V CIII'M II 

rill'I 'A 1 1»»N III I'A It r Ml N I 

swale IllVInluil 

IjUl'I N F.I.I/.AI1I I II"* 

SCIIOOl. 

A Idle v I nvernh'illi 

n i iiPilui iltlaniut liv.innnar 
S.limil, ol ri , 'D impIlK. 

Reiiiilred for s.-in.-mlii-i 
MtH'J. Lil' one trill nulv. » 
leinpuriii-v ti-rti tii-r of Miiki. 
lull- time ur inn-t-lline !«■ 
tenrli throioihoul I tie k' lm»d 
to tier (1 level Ol A level If 
fill I - 1 line . tlir 'llillllv lo olfri 
iiliolhiT inti lee I would he rad 
advantii'le. A k.-nlr iniit 

wuiilil he iivnlliililr in n mil- 
Util)' i-MHTlnli "il i.lllilMnle 
The heliool Iiiik n Klroiill 
MiikIi ill Ir.idltlon .out Ihe sin - 
i-esaliil i nndlilnte vv III tie pi 
liiTted to lieln rim extin--iii- 
i-ii iilnr iiiusii al t Iv tiles 

Api'lll lltlOIIK liv ll-lll'l . 
luiipihei- with tin- n.iini-K ol 
Iwn relereen nlionlil be aeiil 
In llli- lln.iiliilunlni . nl IlM* 

helimd. I 3*134 ft » I 3311 'JU 


LKICEHI'EIIHIIIUK 

i.i.tct ;.s ri . it si 1 1 r i 
.SCIIOOl. OF MUN|I' 

Tile Kuwaiti. Clllli-llr 
Hi ri-et . I ."Ire Ktei. 1 . 1.2 u 1 1 

I’ F.R 1 1* ATI'.T 1 1 
INKTRHMF.N TAI. STAU 

Required lor AiiuiikI . 
1982: 

Tnarher uf Violin 
I i-ili'hiT Viola 1 Si rale 


Turn her nf ‘I 'nllii 

A limited iiiiiuliei ul 
litihts nvallalilr fur 
truthei'H ul Itritlliell IIIKlI'll- 
■ilPHtN. I ml ml I un a irliliir 
ii pin) lilt in inn lo ii'iuli 


Toucher of Wumlwln 

Toucher of Ilravs 

Two posts nvulliible fnf 
instrunientallsts able lo 
taacli tlirtr sporlullsin rand 
also inuro oBnornlly. 

SnlnrtoK In nri ordam e 
with Iturnhiiiii Stains 
Toarhor of vloln, Seale 4. 
Ollier imstH Itlnv lie 
annnhitnd uhavc llnsli 
Brule acrurdliui in iiual- 
If lcnttmis/axiN<r leiirn. 

Usuul truvellliid nllii- 
waiires, ele. iipplv. l-'nr 
iinqiilrlnH nleiise tnlridiinte 
1. nicest ei 951378. 

Applicnllims Ii v l■•tl••l , 
(no furini) to The I'rlni ln- 
lll, Leicestershire Sehunl <■( 
Miislr. Tho Ruwniis. Cul- 
loiin Htruot. Li-l'-i'Kler. IT.il 
O.fJ. shotilil tie ii- id a*> 
soon an pnsnlbln. 13804 1) 

1 3382U 


WALTHAM FOREST 
LONDON uonotrcju or 
WALTHAM FOREST 
An equal oppiirtiiiiiiy 
n mil layer 
MliHic: r.'CNTHr 


nilvnnt diio. 

. Apply tu llnadin I stress fur 

shs. n,, imvn 

Scale 2 Posts and above 

ENFIELD 

liMP.'fcVK u|/ 

KINOHMP.AI) HCI 
hnuthbur 
MKIUk. K 
Romilrnd Roptomhhr, an op- 
thublimtlc ' and- antarprlslnp 

MviSSt!" u &v: 

BpanslUlllty for Inatriimniitnl 
urasDiaation (Includlnu wind 
bund, orrhastra ana Haud 
.OdII Taamn .ana one or tiia 
rivu cliairx. 

.^Opnqftunllv.'tp -nsslst wlu 
tho trnlnlnn of- tho -Kinosmaa 
alnoars . (who hnvp racortls 
■ reoufarly for Uiq BDO nn 
Rdlicatlpnni Fiibtiaat(ons) 
Music tauatit at all nxhmlna 
tlon In vols Jnoludlnp Assocl 

r itad- Board. -Post of fora stimu 
atltli work for u competent 
pianist and musical arrandar. 
Thpro -Is n. lone tradition of 
pupils making muilo male 
cursor ps pec fally In llghl 
muBlo ( . The Dapnrtment has a 
- demanding schedulB, of oon- 
certs, .recordings and festivals 
qnd many peripatetic staff, 

. - London Allowqnce - £498. 
ConsideratlbA glvan to-assltc- 
•Dfe With, ram oval i relaaatlop , 


I UK 1 1MFS KnUCATlQNAL SUPPLY 

IIHIIIUK “nohtoS 

in'iiIi.’is t>|-|>||t Jf VTII JEX Bcnoni 

l MlMMl'Nirv N.; Mr !IIU7Nm 


see nm- ml verl Ini'ineii t midi 
MIsroniini'iniH. (3*#43HI 


Scale 1 Posts 


UEUKORDHIIIKK 

bOU'ITir.RN AREA 
I ai.ya n i) 1 1 ii • ii sciiom, 
f i*l*i HI runt . 1 . rit >ir live, 1 mini, 
lulls. 

Inntlinqrater: Mr. II. liinind. 

L A i 

Inquired (nr September l SHU. 
an entliusKialii riiuili-lan i«< 


tnarh muslr thriiiMdinut this 
II • 1,(1 C.iiinuri'liniisivL' srhooi 
In Ml levnls nf nlilllly. A 
brass player nmi/ui- plnnlil 
lire furred. The depart ineni Is 
well eiiulupnil and bus n liluti 
status within llir st-liiinl. i'.a- 
irs riirrli-iilni' ni'iiviilei in- 
■ lull" ( thnl r, Ori licit in and <• 
itrniiii triiilRIiiii id iniiilmt 
nriiiliii 1 it t iim . hrnl« I. 

CiiiUU'll ni routiiii idnl Inn mHv 
|>e iivratlnbtn lit ini-tnlu rnsn. 

. Anullunriun forms nm 
utdnliishm Irrim mid I'etmii- 
aide in tnn llendinnster ni the 

rs»m> "I'ss-'i’a 


DEUFORDSIIIRE 


mmm 


SCHOOL 
Sad ford 


Brick Hill Orlvq. Uadford 
Hsadmester: R, Cornwell 

?6ipprehonrtve. No. bn roll 

Mdpif/Bgglt 1. to tearlt In a 
nourishing . Mu*lc Dnpsrt. 


- 1 ' for - So atom bar' 

t -..- 1982, tb take; Charge, of. tha 
eac(nna o? Music ‘In .‘ the 
choai'.jThe- ouaceaarui appil- 
■.cant will) Da .expected to take 
gharae' of- Muilo - In bath oui 1 . 

■WPJB 1 , jgPZSBBSmsit 

: Wo giving fuftr details dfquet- 

<■ p awafe 

; -• ed« an rt . to I d phono nuhipers of 
, i.- two rqferdag. .1462421. J 33830 

,V t ■ :•« ,i •>■,* . w |Vt. I ■ ' 


ier 1 * 182 . 
■ I MiikIi . 


IIEUFORIIHHIRK 

•-III' Till HN All! \ 

III ll '(.11 I UN till. |s I ' 1*1*1 II 

. M nV , .r. , :i* "MMi'Nifv 

I'mkKl'Ie III lie, II.Miuhlon 
IIP'IIk tl Pill t t'9 H'\ 

let llmiKl ntilr MYV.'.ll 
1 1 "ji.l in ■■ k I >- ■ Ml A I Ider. 

Iteiliilrr.l foi leiUeinlier 1 11112 
ten, Iipi of Mini, is.nip | t („ r 
onr imr In min >| «i-itii|t|. 
men 1 Mini, 1.111.1111 lo rail A ) 
ve.li- mid lo l Si . and 'A' 

leirl I l.'lll IkIiIiiii ki li.ii, I tntiid 

I .'I ■ l«r»lrft I v elleut 

•>l , l‘"l tllilllv foi vuiiiiu. ki-eu 
well i|iinllfl|r.| I nu Iiri . 

Ani-lli niton lorins ot'iraiii- 
nldi- from rami reini iinhlr |o 
the llen.l ill the s, |i,„.| is.vi 
nlrraiei i 4 II t A | i (33822 

tlKIlFOltimillKK 

H' I III 11 N All) A 

I 1 -M.A Nils llll. II Rlllll. 
siiiiiIiiii I'iiiI. II on. I . | iili.ii, 
lli-ili 

lliil.liilnnl w ■ Ml R ||. I.IIIk. 

II A 

11 e*in II ed llir Se |.| r iiilii-r 1*182. 
n Ki.ri liillm leinliei MiikIi. 

Si nl" I. lent II ti|. I., CS|; 

mill 'll' level I rralniiil -1 1 1 lull 
si In ml la n liilseil i . iiill'rrtlr ti- 
ll ve • ■lii.ol Willi lll'tll )ni|j| la 
iiqeil I -16. Kllnralnl on ilie 
l ii it th-v« i-a| Irlnur nl llir 

low ii Alt nlillll v in offer ra 
aei mill anl.lei I will lip nil 
ml) mil line I'niiiull raiiiim- 
■iioiIiiIIiiii nm) l.e ni nllnblr in 
■ erlnlii < raae*i. 

Alipll* railiiii fui inn iililvi In - 
nl'le (rum nnd i el iirnnlile In 
tlie llerail nl (lie s. 1 1 1 .. 1 1 i s a I 
I'lrnaei. iSHl'J'li I33M22 

DKRIiYHIHKK 

MIDI 'A I H IN • UMMirri I 

s|*i IN IM IN *<( '111)111. 
MlKeil ( 

1*11X1 I'lll'lla I2U III .'.It'll 
I or hi . 

Reiliilreil lor 1 at 
Mr |>lr llilier. 1*1112- ra 
ten. her <i| MUSIC iSiralr II 
lo lulu i) ntron-l unit well 
estnlillahi-*l dep.ir t iiii-iiI . 

Applt Ii) letli-i. Inilnd- 
luit i iirrt. ilium vllnt-, mill 
Ihr nmiles mill nilil reKa.-s of 
two referees, tu 'he llerail- 
iiwiK'i-r. Sfi.iiidiiii si hind. 
WrK' Riniil . S|MiUilo||. |»er • 
liy. I)L2 TUT . I urllier «|p. 
'alia nviillrable on r •- 1 rl|H of 
S A.L 

lli-rti) vhlrr- Ciiiuuy 

Counrll |« .in ".in.il uniii.r- 
iiini'v einiilii) i-r i3ii.MIi 

1 3382 3 

DEVON 

pirate sue illy .In veil nilverllse- 
ment un pnqe 13. (4fi4li» 


EALING 

LONDON nOltl II 'fill OF 
EALING 

Eilm nl lun Pnrvlre 
hliPPl.Y TI.ACIH.KH 
Required for na niiiu n« iioaKl- 
tile qualified mill esuri li-iierd 
leililier*i ill MiikIi «ii lie i*m- 
idovrd IIK simply Teaihl-IK III 
» lie An'lloi II Vk Rlilh hilliilllH 
l.illlllllll We I ill 1 1 llin l t M*l 
A|||I||I HI Ion (oihik from llie 
Uhief L'Iiii mii'ii i ll f li •• i . I.mh- 

■11111 ill '*( I rail ii*i Mml- 

lev lloune. 7*1- K I limirlil*i*- 

Rend. 1 Inn W9 '•*!' JSAI.J 

Id I 3 H T 1 1 I 139842 


KAHT HUSH EX 

I ii 1 1 - 1 1 iii «- uniitil li'*l liaiher »*l 
vlidliK’vliil'i. lo 'emh iin.iiu* 
mid I mil v IiIiihIk tu M lilille rand 
Hei-uililnr v sihimta 111 'lie 
llrlllll'iili All'll. Si rale I llir 
i|ii'illllod imidb 'inrn liravell 
ill*) ill low itnci-a . AliillU In 
ililve n i.ir rnm-iilinl 

I Iirlln-I l»nr 1 1 * id ill a .iiid ran 
pit. nl (am im ms ( r *i in 'he 

I iii)lil) Mlisli l l'lllli . Water - 
■liile I .niie. I.ewea. I'.lai "ills- 
ana lsmiii|ieit uildi i-Knril i-n- 
vnluiin ideiisul. I.ISBIK'I 

1 39 P .I.' 


ESSEX 


. .... II M llllrll lll lllll'l. 

I M nil I 4 Till lip . Ihli'l III Slalli 
1 Ill-Ill l 

itiii nlialli-iili t i mil l»- 
I ell Mraldiiil (1129 7 i 
MUSll hud" I 

llelllllred Mepl enllier. I'lilllil- 

alilal | < i trs*h I 111 lii«ll 1 l"l|l Ilie 

•li llllld III lllla well esllilillahnil 

ilniirtlTmeill . ■ aiiluliiMlIoii 

»v* ilk ll Villi raid!'. 

A|i|ilh'*iihiii foi ms iinil 

fnrtlim Ileliilla Hum lleml- 
tinu her If* HI | KI lip 

lilerasi'i. I.VI.VVih 1 3 3 M J .1 


UEDFOKUSIl IRE 

BDtJCATION MliRVICL 

County 'staff imunici 

TliACIlER ■ 

Rnqulrod foe HnptemUAi- 1089. 
a tomlinr of 'Cnllo to tesrh 
mnilily In llic , Nurtii id the 
County. 8ualo 1. Thl* post Is 
tsmpprnry for line yoar In thn 
first instance. 

'■ Essential Cnr user Alin- 
vynnen Pavnbla. AssiHtnl (?ur 
'Purcharaa Schsmn. 

Appllcatlpn forma ark nvall* 
ubla from thn Chiftf I'llucntlnri 
orriear, County Ilidli ili'U- 
lord. 

,.HR lnn dntei 4 June 1982. 
(38807 ) 133822 


nswriimnr tu 
wuuld Im i i 


Apnlimtlun ti'iims Irnni and 
tu tio mtui'iieil iu the lleml* 
teachnr hy '4lh .lime. Please 
miclnsn stamped radii re as uil 
riivelnpe. <383441 133842 


- Ah, nbl" - «hd onthiiBlastlc 
. practical Musician is neerttiu 

K ho_ can_ both teach to 'A' 
vel and contribute to ins 
extansiva rnuslcsj aatlvitlbs of 
ths : achopl which has a very 
high..' musical.' reputation. 
Candldatea'.ahould . be able tu 
offer one other pub J act.. . 

' Thors- are '.two . orchpatran. 
Chp.ir, . string ornhMtra.: brass 


master, s'. a, a; .fileaae. I'lrcsa 
apply Immediately, ClosTrtli 
date June fst 1982, (38821) 

.133222 


. LEICESTERSHIRE 

;i j - cb^ Pr^ A o^uLicJ c . 

" nruiin s^vartlsematit 

i : :» V* 

' i&K' f-- 2- ■ * f?. (• ■■ )M’-k0p?:-V- 


No. 1111 UulL liVi Nor 'dch 

ISSZR? R 

depsrtniniit of ?hri«*V 0M K 
mlvantnoc). ou, “ >a 

inrifip^s&va. r s r "“ 

turned to iWa Hm 85. "k 
the kc Imol I (35^102 r 1 ^'^ 

north amptonsrihe 

M< ml lays la an ll.u 
■'omprrliensivs (1300* J 

rorrao lu '. ' 3 ? ‘h. Sb* 

i iirnii inrvlna a rSiS 
lairliiiinnt area. ™ r * 1 

. ,.<}e«lulrcil far Bvptenhir 
l.'f r " 8 i* ,0 1 I teacher of 
Miislr. Music Is iiniS 
Ihruuiiiciut tlio school m 
tn iinil Inrjudlnn 'A* levs' 
Tlin •iliool’i music enlcm 
ra hlnli ropuisllon in fK 


HARROW 

EDUCATION COMMIT ni’. 
CANONN JIIGII HCII'MII. 
hlirtlihni Ituuil. ild nwnrn. 
MI'lllJesek 

Tel. No. OI-h.Tj 1614 

» uqii] red Irum *ii.nir in tier In 
i|s 8 l.e. MiKiid a.'iininriirti- 
slvn.! Illuh Ni hind lur |iii|il(« 
iiUftal - 13- 1ft 4' nil eiillllialorallt: 
manlier nf Mirali : preierem r 

would ha (liven tu tl 

tdiil wlnnlMt, 

Tlie iti>|ini'tn*riii oft are 
ruursPH to 'O' level rtilil 
C.h.F. US well lira i hur.il 
work, wind build an . wood 
nuadallst rooms nnd Ini'ill- 
tfns. . Please alum siibsidlury 
subipi-t. A well uuullMi'd. rn- 
thuslnitlo ndwrnmnr tu 1 lie 
profession wuuld Im iiitiai- 
dori'd- 


coiiniv. a 
opeitrd in 
i lassruuma 
rniiinh. 


I^n1 eri 5 W- 

25i' ,nc IWH 

sna imi m 


utiVrat iViii r er- -u 


OXFORDSHIRE 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
I’EIUPAtETIC MUSIC 8TAPT 
W i’ll Hired from BspUmbtr. 
1982 a mil lima ViallwvSb 
leaf hr r Involving work lg 
both Primary and Secondtrr 
Schools In the Ablagdoa 

^ 700. Salary Scale I for uni- 
led tnnehors or on the CMn- 
iv'a Inairuclnr'a scale for nn- 
qunlirieil muilclans. A Bella i 
la svnllnble fur axoariauad 
terarliera. A car la ailaatlak . 
for which travailing alio- 
wumra nrr payable. 

Further partlculari and ap> 
iilh niton (nrnia urn obialubli 
from tlir Chief Education 
< iff li rr. (Munir SacUonl. 
Mio i InKflrld Houitj. Non 
liund. Oslurd OXI 1NA to ba 
rrtiirnnl by Tilt Juni. JIM. 
*«. A.R. finnan. 135277) HftU 

SHEFFIELD 

CITY OF SHF.FFIELf) _ 
I.IIUCATION UEPARTMEHT 
W Al.THLOK SCHOOL 
Hoiiumonl Clci«e, Bhsfrield, |1 
1 H^ a 

Rnqulrnil lur Saoteaibtf. 
1 * 182 . a part lime, if.Sl 
teai Iter uf Muslr. Scalt l ♦ 

* A tip lli alliMi fun ” ..V* 
lurtlirr di-islls rare avalUbh 
I ■ tun Hu. llraudlnaclwr W 
whom they, Mmuid ka »► 
i limed wllliln 8 w«oka «M»» 
nciie iiriiiii « uf (Ida 
rai ei.l ■ 1384991 »«!!! 

SUFFOLK 

OWVVI.t.l. WUill SCHOOL. 

«|l . 18 Ml mil ..... 

(.'oiniireheiiflvu roll J1H> 
MhIiIkiimi*' Ruud. 

l M Al lli li (IF MUSIC SCAljt 

) r»-'|Ulrell Hranliildlaer ' Wjt,5 

work in «, unwiv 

k’;r r, T,r JuftS 

a. tlrsmra vvi)iil'l b« “« lu A 

I.I tlie Plnnm l '“JJJEHni, 

si air u iMiKl '* n , v jU}. rull r*i 

aarlf-f 

M-a. amdrr.nig 

WIKRAL 

TC.v: ,p wi?. r "W' Ar 

1 1 •. il ill full .J,9 T Taarkff 

riridendirr. Ln,t io 

as:. «S.i*» r ® h 

I'll rah ; 

A iiiillr Stlaiat 

uli le* I I'M Ml «••••» ^ nV*#” 


Pastoral 

T 

Scale 2 Posts and 


KENT y:- 

< 'own rv ^oy|l < &iHTM8 I C5i 

acilooy ■ • 

Vraar !!»*'•>" ai arB ia***jS 

from wall '•‘nood 

par if need «K).o,"nd. . 

•»L ll, r"J. SSSSkuMKSL and 


KENT 

COUNTY COUNCIL _ „ 
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
SHfPWAY pIVIHION . 

S OtkHuVoNE <lf«AMMAK 
CHOOI. POM CilltLl) . . 
1400 on roll) , 

nooilnuu i ana. Fulkontuno. 
Knnt. CTail 3UX 
naKHlrnU for Hci)lrmti'<r 1 
1989. Tor one yrrar In ihi* llrst 
liistsnre, n MusIl- kiiavlitll*ht 
who. run offer ra suunltKury 
ailhiau) — FreXcii ur History 
pat-th-ului-lv wiilcoipei . Hi nle 4 
post avmfabli' lor n suIRthly 
a Xpert nut 1 ad mpdidate 

Antily hv IdUi; with curr-l- 
ciiiuin -|V li*i6 to the tleudiitls- 
trans. wllh ihe nainen of two 
rsrorpqn 

PENT VAl l'P.Y SCHOOL 
fnlkaaiunn ' 

Rncjiilrnil . . for hiotamlirar. 
198(3. H teiiiirtpi uf Mush 
(Mrnln 1 ). • 

AbiHv ny In'lqr (oi . Tito 
llDailninster. Font. Vitljov 
, Neccndury Bchoai. ^urrejidril 


term of. tutor* ; ■ • -uad 




atwflB 

r^49> ;!rrR»W/- 


.vv.^ 


fig TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


BBCB0NARY PASTORAL 

fondnuad 

DEVON 

STOVER BCHOOL 
Newton Abbott, Devon 

Reoulred in Soptnmbor, 
rtifdent Houaom 1st r ess . to 
Lava care of 70 otrln nqoil 
Mto jB yoora, nl tills 
Independent boarding 

gthooli 

cTa a r a” °D a p n r t*m o i iV ^ ' i ■ o - 
Kanoatlon. Till. U n 
non-teochlito nost whlrh Is 

bilag ra-odvertlaed. 

AoolicatlonaflnqiilrlCB In 

WORCESTER 

ivonCEBTER COLLEGE 
WO FOR THE nLIND 

Scale 2(8) 

neaulrad Tor SoptemUni- 
.all a quallflrd anil ok- 
«#rlenced teacher lu trakn 
Karoe or boardlnn hmiao 
yfr4»h Year boya ut tills 
Shcol for shin blind 
nuDlla. Subject not of first 
frparlanco but ohillty tu 
raach on humanltina side 
iijifatraa. Previous oxperl- 
tgea with blind pupils not 

ucaiiary, 


Apply at once Uy I otter 
« (ha Hoodmoator, 
rceator Collage for tho 


bllod. Worcaater. l4«n^ Q 


Physical Education 


2 Posts and above 


BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 

■EAC0N9FIELD/CHILTERN 

CKE9HAM HIGH SCHOOL 

IVhltahlll. Chaahnm 

Baid: K. D. Stokna, II. Sr. 

No. on Roll 995 1234 Sixth 
Farm 

Rtqulred for Saplmnlirr 1882. 
in uflatant teacher ror girls' 
Phriieal Education und 
aaawa. Temporary appoint- 
sinl at prosont during n 
pirtod of Maternity Louvn, 
bit could bo permannnt In the 


lulura. Scale 2 post avallnhln 
lo nilubly experleni'nil i-antll- 
4iM. Interoat In participating 
In iitri-currlculur ai tlvItliiK n 
rtmiamendatlon. 

Applications pholild lin 
mdo to thn llnuiimuratnr. 
ctiMhim High Kl-IiuuI with 
ddalb Of Dxparl nnrn. *|linl- 

CAMBRIDGESHIRE 

ftJMlklDOE AREA 

^oiLfiOfe ° N - 1 LLAC1,: 
Btqulrgir ror Souinmlinr. u 
° r ,_ Olrla r I’liyulenf 
t*. 1 " 10 .?* vvlihitt thn 
«!ra iL . J ^^l 4* n IJnpoi-t- 
* *'.\® L’nirmuii- 


ttrAM ^ T,a " 

dorbrt 

!»»R C SECONDARY 
mVw 0111, Mouruamiiulh. 

Bhntcmhnr. lnsu 




Xd ■ d dr a • ■ a 51'“ 1 P nginaa 

fbiit ■ of two rn- 
osv.bdaamiiV «"k- 


JJrtfordshire 


I34290 


^^a. qh«iiunt, Hnriis. 
■’* ■MHlri BB In 


WALTHAM FOREST 
OF 

»mpissisr. opnor * un,t y 

.Alio wanes. 

•CONAUailT HIOI 1 BCHnni 
Connaught Rond 
ILeytonstuno. London Pii 

K. , .“ ld ' ; ,?r. p. E a 1 

AaQUlrad for fiaptoRiber iqdq 
OF “V,°Y^,C^ P °^ hBSS 

DEPAniXffiS^Bcafe^l^'Sfi 

Coniprehonslve Oirl'a" Bchnki 
BK- pupIIs aaad 1 1-1 4 8 S£g?' 

teeelier a |s .A>i 


ENFIELD 

borough of 

SOUTHGATE BCHnni 
m°* ad Vom n a ne?val 


uo-niuiviEPiT Beale a In th . 
Coniprehonslve Oirl'e" SrhirS 
Ba* PUP«» ooad 1 1-14 8 552?' 

KSSS& 

fn 0 i' 8n r t pc»v Or 


HAMPSHIRE 

THE VYNE SCHOOL 

n"- T Yra^" ai ap 


§ 0 o P R r “ro^ v °- 


UimShtS m iS'p t0 Hee n d Poacher tha ^■2{n8 ggg' (8^948^ 
nncloelna curric..i.r« ...l!*'?*! — — IS' 


smmm 

134920 

WILTSHIRE 

WeVdV^S-h 75 v5. “&«•» 

loA Q r K SL ,U lE52 September 
i»'.E. b ° <n c barge of Omv,8‘ 

wffh Hgnst 

(wo referees to 
the Headmaster, (38931) 

134820 

Scale 1 Pasts 


AVON 

COUNTY OP AVON 
ST GEORGE SCHOOL 
BHs’sjH OVV n Avenue. Briatol 

for September 1882 
-ain.chor of Physical Educa- 
tion and Oamun for Olrla. The 
fr?.) or . tench Inn oommltment 
will be with tho first Ihr 00 
yc-nra. with 4lli and 5th year 
(.'lines nlso required. 

A strong commitment to a 
structured pamoral ay* tom 
will bo nocoBBory. Applicants 
should state other subjects 


Application* be latter to 
the Headmaster, with full de- 
tails and tha names of two 
roforoas. <59223) 154222 


«a*iio ana ma nai 
rcforca®. 159223) 


BEDFORDSHIRE 

Ul ittinnhain Turn, Dodford. 

• I'ji ^ytnprol'otmlvo. No. un 

F-ttst/'iTr B £v;.r v. r E ! ^ 


.. of Girls' .... 

clumps. Res la I. with an sn- 
tliuainam Tor hockey, tennis 
ntul gym nan ties. 

Apiillrninin farms and 
furlfinr dnlalls from tho Hsad- 
maarnr. ra.a.o. plaaao. Ploaao 
. Closing 

diilo 7th June 1 882. 159520) ^ 
134222 

DERKSII1RE 

WAINGEI.'b COPSE SCHOOL 
llniiniitrk Avnnuo, Woodloy, 
llnodlng. JUJ9 4I1F. 

N O. it. 1371) (Group 12 
niixeil 11-18 CumprolionBlvo) 
Itoqillrnil Nniitoillbor, 1882. 
pxiinrleni nil Trnclier of airla' 
1 *. II. and Giirnoe IKcolo 2 for 
niilinbio rniinliinto ) to ba lit 
rhnrgn or Uirls* nartloit. 

A|< plli-nl Ion fur ms nitd 
rill-lltai- ilotnlla nUiiul tlir 
Hihiuil rnim Ilia lloadmanter 

V B.it. n. Pli'uran). CfuBlnn date 
lli Juim. 11)12. Uorkshlre 
County ('"iiinll Is ait equal 

mm nU9 ”Dbb d 

BRADFORD 


rai'P'V . I'nmi'i 
dula Ttli June 


ra.a.o. plaasi 
liumidlliitaly. 

■ June 1882. i 


l wa- .in 

k ofijr 2n**_ B h°uld i>e able 

.Of*. Outf faulli- 
p ' Prln B*r alluwancn 

f wll y d a tnlfi* forms) 


R^lf? TME N T 

«^SM**Uoo. Uochoster. ' 
^ fc!ira c*iS?j. ' Educaiioi) 

;SS3wdE» , -'K.T. 

ii tif*? *« i*o 

K WH 1 ™ 1 * 

“ph Wfi'iUKH 

SWiSfe: 


uf itlrlra I'hyNleal lsducailotti 
Hi- 111'1 1 , fur lllla 13 -Ib mlxod 
(iontpreheiialvo HiIidoI with 
1430 iiuplln on roll. 'Die auo- 
rnararul applicant will no ro; 
ftuirod to run tribute to all 
napiuta of tlto wurk or the 
doparininm. but an in to rest in 
iiynniiiBtina oimI ilnnoo will Re 
Utirllculorlv wnluome- , 

Aiiplk-nllon . furinn and 
further details ntoy bo 
nlitalitnd (ra.a.o. plonse) IP 
wiiii m i-uinulatetl fnrma ahould 

aiEy* 

OALDERDALK 
IlIPPiaUIOl.Mi: GRAMMAR 
HCIIOOL 
Noor Jlulirqx. 

(Aid on i 420 boya) 
it mi iilr ml In Bn pt ember , MPS- 
tor fur Physical Uduoatlon. lo- 
ci udliig (Irltkiji Jind nugRy 
Frintholl, snrt Enallah. 

Apply tu llKUdmagtor .with 
nninns of llerorons. taB 7|34a3 

CALDERDALB 


ugTi.r.ll Bi.iiuuk ... 

II nt tin non Itiiud. Halifux IIXI 

It nnii Irnd from, 24 August 
1088 fur this 1 i *19 8 rcO"- 


i'AWoT -W M. 400 r p-uSriB, 

a tonyiurary HEAD of ltoya 
PH (Benin 1). The vecoijcy 
arlsos ns ra result of aoroiia 


havering 

H^gf N Pi g OHOUa » OP 

Romrord ' 

mblnWftS rnehurch 47568 

j,r ' 


US VfT 'Mfassr t e 

JfJJfJ* f n .d foBlap tno already 

■t” 1 T imSAS ! 11 ,tt thD ,ubJo0 ^ 

ROJ^AL liberty school 
U pp-r Brentwood Road. 
T«fe?».E arK ■ J* ° m fa rd 

fCfWi' , y ° B r ,ard 40844 

M e A d . t *" Charl ■ , • P, Co1 ®"* 

SOY® P.K. AND GAMES. 
1 ^a LE Th. r, ‘ , h lr 'i d September 
i “f The school has s wall 
SSSS I ? d "ports Hall, heated 
open-air swimming pool, 
games flslds on stfe and a 

ssrwa?.B!r l,r 89684 

Headteacher! D.E. Saunders, 

go% 8 m p b B E r- 

£1 WtS-pr ^“"a'ss 

■yvltnmfng pool, a wide rongs 
of indoor ond outdoor actlvl- 
tl"« era o fro red. The minibus 

"Vo? B «parta^ al AppU "atlon'a 

SKeisass ^Y nP uw ri d 

ad vat an 66 m ‘ lh ‘ W °“ ,d b * "* 


p.M asad 1 'K™..*, , ,*r; 
sS"* jT 1S!H *“ l ““®! 

KS.. n r"i , !S: \t d. r ;."B;: r 

iiaaswaatf ■"'.y/.v; 


HERTFORDSHIRE 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
NORTH HERTS. DIVISION 

FEAnNHfLL acnooL 

Jsknlalo Way, LetohworDi, 
Group 10. Roll: 772 (Mixed) 

fssuri r .Rr,.. %rnw< 

P.E. (Scale 1) to provide for 
an expansion pf the 3rd yesr 
curriculum baaed upon the Ip- 
tnke. of approximately 100 
gug| 1 l 01 •"■*' from 

Ability to offer a second 
subject la essential. 

Apply by lottor to ths 
Ilendmaster with currloulum 
vltao oud nses end addreaaea 
or two rsfonioa _(».B,a. 
Plouse). (43580) 154282 


HERTFORDSHIRE 

HB®fe ' 

flentu Lena, Homsl 

180 In Sixth 

& r o 8 r 0 WJ'° r ‘o» 

P.E, and OoogHmhy. ...... 


Buooeaaful aandldata 
bo oxpdctad to tearo 
xlmately 2.3 aomoa/P.B. 


approximately 2.3 OtinoF 
and 1.3 Oooflrephy, 

prospoctu* and further 
formation from the Hoad 
tar to whom applicai 
ahould bo made na apoi 
poaaible. (No forma). <39 


HERTFORDSHIRE 


«^roN 

LNER 


HILLINGDON 

lond h < ?MS 3 S 8 S h op 

DO “ av bchool res rc 

UkenKiS^UPa^'usiO 

BOX 

^ulrad for Septembor 
TEACHER c OP^)IRls P.E. 

■ ^lL9S l> 5 r,BM,nt requires 

■ candidate with an In 

mSuh "involving nB wo^n 

■O DBO a HllflO , 

On site facllitfsa include 
P^auJa** tenn is h *and R'JSffl 

^“^•""aprauj^a * B water 
fPP. r,B . *"6 mountin con- 
sn B Vn»«-JL* n f lld J to “bowing 

sScoSaiss t i o ro 0 f P ^u an “ re 

Mo r lyr ®a la “ do- 

cS^2Ron.W^ h ^, U, SM 

figta^PTa^sO ofwh'o*; 

form W M' - ba Jhi .VxtT 
vvance Patable. Dnd ° n i,,D ‘ 

JJ^bpol stetlng tho namoo 

°e n r d eeS d 1S P 9V|g> ° f 


RENT 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

|»*»E5!,° , ii D iff»'>a'SI5 EM ' r 

THAMES VIEW SCHOOL 
DAuf gj*' OrsvesonifT Kant 

Co-r^Wr 1 M ‘ B ° W<,r8 ‘ D A ' 

io?ra ,ro6 from September. 

Physical Education, Scale 1. 
■Rl“ to teach throughout the 


2?° ' , 8 “ m e specialist know- 
ledBo of Netball and Dance (a 
dealrable and an ability to 
offer Mathematics or Engl tall 
•J ■ second subject would ba 
an advantage. 

Thames view School open ad 
In September. 1968 In new 
purpose built accommodation 
and serves a large private 
housing estate In a pleasant 
area on tha east or 
P/^Wnd, The school is an 
11 • I' mixed High School of 
1050 pupils within ths 
Thamas-sldo system of secon- 
dary education. Thamasvlew 
School offers a wide range or 
C.8.E. and Cl. C.E. 'O’ Levol 
courass. The school has a ful- 
ly equipped gymnasium and 


ly equipped gymnasium and 
sports hell, with playing 
Melds on site. Laras nddltlon- 
sl piayTng fields will be avail- 
able In 1985. The olrla par- 
ticipate in all the winter and 
aummar sports. 

, Letters of eppllcstlon. giv- 
ing Tull details and naming 
two rslerass. to the Headmas- 
ter. at the School as soon as 


KIRKLEES 

METROPOLITAN council 
HONLEY HIOH SCHOOL 
Station Road. Honlsir,. 
Huddersnaid. HD7 Scil 

1 REP ?'lS U * ** l ° '®* 
Required /or 31 August 
tor ths School Year ISBwbo 

Ic^le 'r^rPH® 

EDUCATION Tor bora. Exo Si- 
lent facilities for PB In new 
Sports Rail and new gymna- 
sium. The tsscsr appointed 
ill be required loteoah i 
,«w periods of subaldtary sub 

t eat, preferably Biology 
Environmental Btudlea. 

Please apply by latter to 
er at the School, 


names ana aaaraaias pi iwo 

nnur- - " oon M "ft m 


KIRKLEES ' 

METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 
gA^DfNE NOOK HIGH 

HD$ ^Q| ROad, . Hull, * BrariB ' d 
In*- li <$arapr*hQn*lva'i 1460 
¥Sfi cqmprehenalvs aqhool ' 


Sixth Form Collage to the ■ 
west of Huddersfield, one 
mllo rrom the Ml! 2 . 

Required lor the bogfnnlnn of 
tha Autumn Term J882 a 

teacher, SCALE 1; for 

OJ R LB*‘ PHYSlOkL febUCA - 
TION end GAMES, .to loin' a 
department or three staff. 
This la a. temporary appoint- 
ment during the absence ,pn 
maternity leave of a member 
of staff. The school possaasBe 


Stsnatead Rood. Hoddesdon. maternity ^ leave of e member 

Heru ENl 1 PQ* , _ „ of atefr. The school possess ea 

All ability 11- l® Co- - two, flymnasle, sn indoor ho- 

aciucitlonal. Approx. 920 on atod awimmlnH POOI. en athlD- 
rall. n ,_, j tic tract, tennis courts end 


ACKER 


»V' 

for September 


® of later 8 celo 2 ro p a SkK*' 

?S5 y 


of ataff' The school posaaasea 
two, gymnnela, an indoor Ijn- 
ated awimming pool, ah i athlo- 
tla tract, tennli courts end 
extansiva ploying f|“lda. All- 
major games qre played and 
other mombjre of eterr are 
Involve a wftn aetlvltea. 

Application forms, sna 
further -partloulers (g-a .f^a. 

esss^'/ssShf'^m. 


ariaoa ns ra romni o* 
mniil nnd Ira Tor the 1088/83 
acoileinic yoor only- Scnle id » 
nvelldbln f*ir suitably qujji; 
iriiiri nnd o*iwrloncao 
emit. (I'riivtauu uppllcnul^ 

...ra L 11c°53toraSurtl;"^^ 

nm) the name* onti add‘c*» 0 “ 
id Iwn rnfpreera. , ® B43 Y 54238 

DORSET 

TIJi: tilt ANOL HEiUONDARV 

ftiid vers 1 'll unit , Cl'f 
(Camurnlirnsivn ll-i®. 

Vt'iiiu Ire il 8 npiember I - 
Tent her ul Glrlh P 1 *■'. J!.!, tu 
Plesan apjily W 

t-'irrivwlum vltue naming *«S 

n-m-ura umJ viral Ini) ■ 


HUMBERBIDE 

i88Mlte NT 


KIRKLEES 



”°Si?“ P Bnd ' ^application 

Mtw "f ‘ha app’SBrance of tbi, 

nolle® in the. pr ess. 

LEICESTERSHIRE 

c»5P^ A c [ s.i:&. 


LEICESTERSHIRE 

VALE OF C ATMOS E 
, CDLLEOE 
cold Ovorton Rood. 
Oakham Rutland. Laics. 

Cumprahe naive 11-16 

Hail 940 

PHYSICAL EDUCATION 
Scale l 

Required August. rwa 
BnecLaliBt tfiadiari o t 
5«X“ r 5 al * ortucatloji. Post 
to toacli boys 1 P.E 
ln*“roet in 


.ra.orcat in tioaksy. tennis 
trompollning. The 
pxeeiieni sports 
Li.-LLI 1 .. Including new 
“ nd now Indoor 
neatnd swimming pool. 

M^H rth S r de lolls from tho 
** B *d' Apply Immedlntaly 

LEiS^V ■aS 

tfA r >“»Ba5 f i> twp 

NEWCASTLE 

3°val orammar school 

Hskdalo Terrace 
4 d)( C,,I B upon Tyne NB2 

» JSSicSt PS-itta 

S«mnjffiV 0r “ b,y QvmnRitlqg 8 
&5^m Bnd ae^s 0by a^ 0 ^ 

leaching oxporlopee daslrabfo 
but nor psaentfal, 

“ II dotnilp are available 
Headmaster lo whom 
2R?l lc -«S n ?. wah curriculum 
vitae nnd the, noma* or two 
a ° se ] i o u i d bo sent et 
PM- .The “PR ointment la 
likely to bo medp boforo tlie 
end of Muy. (43ff6> iSdtffil 


MIDDLESEX 

hamm-on school 

JMC Dev ll . if, bso boys - 
“40 In, SUth Form 
5*9HiV ,R ®9„ _for September. 
1?“*.- duallfled teochor of 
Physical Education. Balary: 
II urn ham plus Outer London 
Hampton Allowances 
Further Information available. 

ei^RPi ,c "V. on » w, ! h full cur- 
fujulum vltao and names of 

IStTPWT EWIR: 

NORFOLK 

BLYTH JEX SCIIOOL 
St. Clements Hill, Norwich 

No. on Roll: 1370 

Specialist Teacher for 
□ iris P.E. 

^.;“,h d e;^^r>ar.?y o ?o 

Baaentla). ,BCt,,1d 

r..«Rrl ,c “. ,lon .. fnrme and 
d ? tBU 5 frara and 
tress "at* „ 1 ^ 

apRD B a <5 , L. H,nH 

_ Cannarby Lane, 
aprowston. Norwich 

MOD mixed 
12- IB aae range 

_ . Beale 1 

Teacher ufGlria P.E, and 
Gam ns 

l 0 l &a ^ ,u,ra,1 ,or 8>|1>an,hsr ' 

Isr'a^tha SShfel. Vfiktft' 


Cheshire 

Application form (send sae). are obtainable from Ihe Head or ihe 
School, lo whom ikey should be returned as soon as possible 
Assistance with removal expenses is given In approved cases. 

X ft. 0. TOW UN SON. MA 

HEADS OF DEPARTMENT 

HEAD OP RELIQI0U9 EDUCATION: 8CALE II 

Wtaverham High 
Lime Amine, Weaverham 

Ff. "-18 Compiehenaive tn 4 deUghtfui Mmhwal area ol km-ChaaNm 
(^ndTdalaa must ba gieduataa abla laoKarRH up to ’O' leva). RwMrad Saptofitoar 

o^on M 088 H 1^ l,rt49 th8fM,tar ' ^W 11 ®*** P"** wri*d^»haSlui«Sr 5 

SCALE 2 POSTS & ABOVE 

8EC0ND IN MATHEMATICS DEPT: SCALE III 

Weaverham High 

For achoal and an* 8 Uon detala ace undar Heeds of Department 

ssa susr* “ w —** 

8CALE I POSTS 
COMMERCIAL SUBJECTS 


RudheaA High 

Shlpbraak Road, RuMeaih, Northwkh, CW9 IDT. 

j9 82. Aim s moment this ta mainly Mho 


wO davatop lha a 
11-18 Comprafic 


RuMeaih, Nonhwkh, CW9 7 DT. 


« to mspopd 

lairihasan.igHtKlBMmiigaaf agUpoMfii 7 


1-HUSIO 2. COMBINED SCIENCE 3. BIOLOGY 

Whitby County Comprehensive . 

Sycamore Drive, l Wi fifty, Ellesmere Pori 


1BS7 Puple; 153 bi aM) tom. 

5 mh 8 »^ nS?S 3 aIS** d ^ *" B " tbCm Nw^ratoSapiemberliirone 

J* Ja a strong muate departmeni odartno a MM ranos ol nutkal adMUaa- 
oppoihinity to loach 141 to ■O r Swaj and » dewtof) own apMUtan. 

2 m' P iSSl lW ** 9 Com ^ 8 e ^^^«4«»rScta)l 
3. A Biology Spedatu roquhad: 'O' end ‘A’ Isvel huh avafaftla. 

HISTORY “ ^ ' ‘ 

MUtUenlch County Comprehensive 

King Ednwd Street, HlJdlewfch. Tel: Mtddlewkh 3170. 

In Saptwriier 1872 when 

oxairlnaUon work. The CBEfD lever coirsa Mowed la Ihe Sctotia Cmawd 13-18 

1. QB0SRAPHY slflfoLOQY ’ • “ 

Hobnes Chape! Comprehensive 
Chester Rowt, Holmes ChapeL Tel: Holmes Chapel 34513. 
Pu^neohdftrabcBd 1I-1B, opened fet 1B7S. ijo. on rod Saplsinbsf 1962 l, 040 ta yean 

Raeulrad a a eto mhar IQR9 man in imilniMi aiqwndon: 

) I becoming paimaiwni Qraduala tor 
tdQBograpfijrloCEE end G' level wH)| 

I 1-3, aC lRR. to Years 4-8 mth 

1. TECHNICAL DEPARTMENT (Woodwork btosl : ~ 

2. OEOGRAPHY^pYS PE 

Stilton County Comprehensive 

Wocdchurch Lotte, Ettfimer* Port. South Wirrat, IM 3NO. 

On raU 1350. 1 1-18 mixed oomprehemto. 

Roqmred Scptmber 1982 tor ong year, temporary pasta only. 

Ctodng date 48i June, 1902. 

mathematics ■ ■ 1 

Norton Priory Comprehensive ' 

Oulltfitids, Runcorn. Tel: Runcorn 6J631 • i •- - ' 

Requited tor September 1982. An atoBtv lo leech Physical Education Dr ’Cempblar 
atiKjtM would ba an advantaoo. S.PA alomnce payable. Help nidi hwsfu i 
(Kpdrod. . . 


Hand! Road. Ahkger, ST73HR: Tel: Aisacer 3221. 

1 1*18 Mcvrehenstoa, IMS an itA, 160 in Sixth Rmh. 

RcqiAad Boptember 1982, wtd qualified, M lo ■0’ and W Im at Ttfi*nnuy tor cab 
yeur wtth powWily ol becoming parmonanl. 1 

ptoaao apply Hnmadtetey. ' , - • • 

REUQIOUS EDUCATION Hid GBOQRAPHY 

Westland! High . . 

Nobler Chapel Road, Cortgleton. Teh Cottgleton J6W, 

Ooeducattanal 1 1-18 cotopehenaMi c! 880 pupa* (160 In 8U)i Form). 

Twhpuwy lor ona year wflh a possteHv fd becoming MmanenL Raqulrad kv 
. September 1992, watfquaWtod. Thom wtlbb scope lor exiriitoatai work tore witabty 


ptwaa dhv ifnmedWsJy to Oh Head Teacher.. 

1. MATHEMATICS i FRENCH (HalMliflB) 

Wearrrkem High *"- 

For aohooi and appBeetbn detal* *«• isidarHoada ofOapailroenL r 
Raqukpd tor September 1982 « ea-toon aa paagtola Owraallar. 

1. Applicants must ba graduate* Ate to offer awne Scfenca to C'-tavg). 

2 . QraduSia «Mt abKty to'Olter aom Beman an advariaga. 


-• • . .'-'i.M 

r- 

I 

: i> i . "• 

1 '*:. ' 


m 


i 

•- tr $1 

r.W l 

?! ‘ill 

A'i . :,»r J 
!■$#; 
i -W&- 

: V-W 


, im 

■ 

K 





.ft 


i ';■ ! 


1 


.. m * 




Hi I - 

• k V ! - I . *■ * 


ii3. 




*! J 


64 


r»K times koih-ationm. Supplement 


SEC PHYSICAL 
EDUCATION 

rnnlfimrd 


NORTH YORKSHIRE 
COUNTY council 
M ALTON SCHOOL , 

frltl I pi uvc Itniitl. Mill tun 
YO I 7 ONI* 

1 1 — IB ■ 700 hays ami fllrl". 
Hpqulrril Hi'ptnntbi-r 1 ‘IH2 
A s Hint an l TiNitlior Sr Bit* I fur 
fi I It LS rtlVHICAL E Dll CA- 
TION ANn (JAMES. A M»r- 
> lallxt liittTKtit Hi netball anil 
uuliluur iuii'biiIIx will be mi 
intMiiitoflp mill tippllrentx an; 

uxkt-d to liullcatr ilirlr nccoiiiI 
l« ui'li I mi tubjoi-l. 

AiipLy liy Int tar nlvlim full 
curriculum v I Kiln and ilii* 
iiuiiicH Hint iirtjlroaana '»[ two 
raforPii*. 71 I 

NORTIIAM PTONSHIKE 

M mill. ETON CIIF.NKY 
CIILNUEfllT SC1IOOI. 

Ai rlicrv fl noil, Mlriillntun 

r. It anbury, Ox an 0X17 


9EFTON 

M>:1 11 1) TO LI TAN nOllOIKIH 

OK SEI TON 

Eilur iltloil CiillllilLI I •<<< 

O It I : K N II A N K N tillll.'H IIIC.II 
SCHOOL 

I I us l Iiiiis Hi, ml. Simihnciri. 

Mrrii'jslilu I‘K8 lil.T 

TWO TKACIIEIIS €»!■• tilll l."H 
I’.H. isi uli- 11 ■'('•iillri'il (or 
ynini'inluT 1!I32 to tout'll suli- 
Jfut lu nil otic Hint ability 
rnnnr. Ilm key Npiirlullsi 
iirtauillv ri'imlfnl. but a mil l- 
runt xlmulil also tin wllllni) to 
miita'rtaki' <• vnrltiiv nf itrl I vl- 
tlex dun mi ami uft«*r xi-linnl 
lion I'M. 

III It K It A I .li HO VS IIIOII 
SCHOOL 

Windy llni'biiiir It ii ml. 
.Smilliiiwi'l . MiTsfl'Niih' 1‘IIH 
SOT 

< Croup Id. 11-16 Ciiinit.i 
TIJAltlir.H OE II ( I S' H ' F.I.. 

(tiraln I i riujuli'ii.il .lor si'i'trin- 


tit<r 


iit'i Inllnl lu hiiIi- 


itrnitlrnil, from 
I1IH2. nil nil tliuHlus I li- 


Clicnoy. 

2GU - „ „ , 

Supt nmlirr 

lu.s lie unit 

well- mini l( I ni I tnnrlmr nl 

a lrl*' I'F. iSl'uIk 11 lu Join n 
vnaiilU ■Inpnrlincilt. Thin la a 
■taw pual croulail In rnnjintiae 
to Ilia rapid urn win nr thin 


Kupoi'bly clnslOHiid, 
built tnniurcliiiinli 
1740 uu mil) which upannd In 


13 79 to snrvu a nloaxant rurul 
arts. 

Chandnrlt liat excellent 
facilities Including a npurifi 
liu 1 1 and nxtnnnfvp playing 

llPldh. fllinllcl.lt ns s 111 II 1 III 111' 

lullv roiiiniltitul to ciirrlt iilur 
unit cxlraeiirrlriilnr spurt Iiiii 
aril villas und wlllliitl tu limcli 
orrms Ilm wliiiln nun rmtiii' 
In dud Inn the rii-at Sixth I'tirnt 
Intaka. A npoclul Interest In 
gyuiun stli:K would ho nil lidded 
udvaitiute. 

Please apply by latter en- 
cloiliiu a curriculum vltau by 
4th Juno. Further datalln am 
available Irani tlta Headmas- 
ter on receipt of a foolscap 
9AE. (390231 134228 


NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

CORBY out! LADY A 
POPE JOHN XXIII nc 
SCHOOL 

Tower Hill Rand, Corby. 
Narthantii NN1B OTF 

llnuulrod rar September 
1 982, Tcnrliar af Girls PE 
- temporary appoln tiiiont 
Initially fur Una term. 

. Further datalln end UP- 

F illmtlcin form available 
ram tlio lleadinuatar ( MAE 
please). €39949) 134222 


19112. sin 
) nit nsBiMlIIrtl. 

noi.v family men 
SCHOOL 

V trill in* I.iuiii. Tlicirniim, 
Llvirriuiul 1.23 41 M) 

TMACfllllU OF BOYS' I'.U. 
(Hraln I ) ri'niilri'il fur Nniitrin- 
bur 19112. with nlilllty tn 
■ iff r iiiii- nr imirr ul the lol - 
luwliiii: Hr ninl lilt Film ulinil. 

Sui'IiiIihiv , CIpiMirnpItv . 

A nplli'ut lull fiirmti ami 
further ili'lalls urn nvilllalilc 
frinn the lleiulti-iii'liiii'H at tliti 
Si IniuLx, mi rcrrliU uf u h. n.it. 
Cloning dale: 4th Jiin«_(9B'4 
til pnotn. 133474) 


134224 


for all pnetn. <3.3 47 ■ 

SHROPSHIRE 

I.IMICATION COMMIT TLi: 

1 1 Alt I CKt'lll r 9i:ilC)Ol. 
(.'iiriitlni! Crnarnni. 

Mliri-w-tbiuy KYI 4 LI. 
lieiiulri-il for si-lit •initier I 1 ) Mil 
fur till* 11 - In in lx ml i-uut- 
pr alio ii>« I vi- nrhuiil u ycumii and 
■in t hit a Ilia tic api'i-lullat tu 
much HOYS PHYSICAL 
EDUCATION. 

Ability to teach soma 
Geography would ba an 
ad vatitoue- 

Purthor detailn and applica- 
tion forms can bo obtained 
from elm Headmaator (s.a.e.). 
(35616) 134223 

STAFFORDSHIRE 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
KING EDWARD VI IIIOII 
SCHOOL 


Welt Way. Nawpurl Hoad, 
fit afford ST 17 9YJ 

ilequlracl fur Sop Ion 

SCALE I TEACHER OF BOYS 


lumbar 1992 


WEST SUSSEX 

nniiNim iirciib 

in IMI'K LIII'.NHI VI. hl'IIOOI. 

WoillUiilN I a nr . Ilituiiur 

Itfiilx. IMiSl .41.11 

(On nip lAl ....... 

itfipilriMt seiitn lit liar 1 MIIJ 

ci nnlllle.l Trill'll or of t-tl'l* 
l*.l'.. amt (•Uluru. IiiIiti'hi In 
i mill cm r<l 1 1 ni 1 1 >ii ■ ill iivnltin-i- 
lii'K anil iniutrrii ditiui*. 

Appiv by lotli-r to lli'iiil- 
nuiHtrr at 11-lionl ai sunn as 
ttniMilile with 1 iirrlrnliiin rilae 
mill iinmi'i anil mlilmsi's «il 
TWO ri-fi ri-«'i. (.TH'.t.Htl 13422 3 

W1I.THU1HK 
MAl.MLSni'IKY niTIOOI. 

1 I -1H Mlli>ll I'lMiUiirlii'ilsItr 
IO.AHM A<- ri.lt. Mr. I A 
Il'An y 

lMIYSlCAI. LIIUCAT ION 
I'niulrliit ill hi'iiti-iilln-l . a 
I'tiVHlml I'.iliii at Urn ti'iiilii'r tu 
ill sis 1 svllli tilrl's lininrs anil 

I’.l.. Mils is a ti'iniHiiai v 
■ 1 iiiu •( 11 1. 1 in-lit lo invar il 
ntlili'riiltv Irava wltll till’ ptii- 
Hitiiiiiv ul a pur 111 line i»t |iim 
Inirr. t'liri'e In a si rum] Irnitl- 
tlun lit tin- .HiIiukI of siiuiiim 
feir I'Uvaintl tdm niton. 

I urllirr ili-tnlls will hr nant 
ml rri-i-lpl uf a itamiird 
mlilri-s null envuliilM-. 

AniiJ la. ul iinii by It-llrr 11111 
fciriilN) tu lh» llrnlllimwrr . 
Mulmrnhtirv Srhuiit. t'urit 
(iiislniin. Muliiirnliu ry . Wilts. 
t.TBftftl ) 134222 

WILTSHIRE 

ST. JOHN'S SCHOOL 

0 reliant nuail, Marl linn a Kill 
f>NH 4 A t ■ 

1 I ■ IH t'UIIIMI'lllll-ll'llVK. 

N.O.It. 1300. Slxlli I ni'iil 
20U- 

lleaitiiuihii-r: Mr .liihii T. 

Prlrr . M.A. 

MF.OliIRL.r) roil Mtl’TEM- 
It K II . 1992. n Sculi- I iniulier 
fur rftrle f’.E. mufttiy In Low- 
er School (Yenra 1 - 3). The 
toraon aounlit ithimiil lie ulile 
offer Tnunln ae a major 
lumn , but campaiunce In 
_>anca, Cymnaetlca and Net- 
ball la atea daelrabla. 

Fnrciinr dctalle mill apnllca- 
tlan forme from tlta Ifeaamae- 
ter at tho above A4 S.A.E, 
. plonee. <393391 134232 

WILTSHIRE 

CASTLE DOWN SCHOOL 
Ludoor ahull. Andover, llanin 
Group 10. II • 16 mixed 


E 

K 


PHYSICAL EDUCATION 
Candida ten ehnnlU wrltn tu 
thu Head m aster at the School. 
HiciuUInn a deiolled rurrlcu- 
lum vitae. Ilin iiamen and 
uddresenn nl ttirno rrfnreua 
Hull etntlnn Wlinl art Ivl ties 
th ay are prepared tn fueler In 
the achucil. 

All eppllcanLe are uakatl to 
note that It le the County 
Council's view that It Is da- 
slrahln Tar their employees to 
ba membarii of an apprnprluti 


cunttirehenHivo. 
PHYSICAL UUli 
TEACHCrt (SCALE 1) 


EDUCATION 


far Snptnntbnr. 


NORTHAMPTONSHIRE WaKTOa.ia 1 

STAFFORDSHIRE 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
BLYTHE BRIDGE HIGH 
SCHOOL 

Cheadln Ituad, lllythe Orldne, 
Wluke on Trent. HTl I Ol'W 

".'OrTi 

lilHfCAT^oM' nraruralily 4 with 

In 


nOADE COMPREHENSIVE 
SCHOOL 

Stralford Road, Honil*. 
Nurlliumpton NN7 3LP 

i 0 vr u u |r ;s.M.rsi5,TX r j 

tenrher of Priyxlcnl Eiliu-d- 
tiint (St-Hlr I) to atislat 
with buva I'M and Oamcm at 
thin 6 r.e. 11- IS rural 
r u 111 pre lie nn I v it xclinol. An 
tunsriioni tnurlilna will 
(inn a xmiill part or Ihn 
llrunt'i 


w 

A taachor uf Girin' PE. 
(Tide iidit in leiiiunrury fur 
nun ye nr but cuuld bPruntu 
pormaunnt). 

Fiirtlmr datalln mill furin uf 
appllcatlnn from Thn I fond- 
master at tho School. Please 
cue la sc a h lamped oddrannnd 
envelope. (39344) 134222 


WOLVERHAMPTON 

BO ROUGH COUNCIL _ 
EDUCATION COMMITTEE 

Roqutrnd ror^Beptnmbari 

HIGH PI ELDS SCHOOL 

Tout'll nr of Hirin' I'E 


ax per 1 1 mi 


form .. - . . ... 

iui iinnfiil anpllrunt'it 

1 1 ninlablii . a tfiuml xillijmt 


must 


Thin 
j»polr 
Tor a 

WK-Sf 

giudn 


orrornil. 
la 


11 iinrtli ulnr 
IHtme. 

Auplii'iitlon roi'inn iibinln- 
able from mid returnable to 


able front mid roturiiuhln to '™ ,I P 
Hie Jli-uilloiu'har (a.u.n.l. «•'» * 

AH uiiplirniite are nnkail to ™ 


ruin 1. Good .all 


nimnntlal 


liniielvi), Inin 
buliai linn III . . 
on Ilia HiiuUinrit Iniuii 


mlxnd rum in 
ititmil In inmlarn 


mx 1 

'(imora- 


npeit rnu 


inlry 

durv 


Hdplnm 
cuuld wnl 

BpeihJffL'TIW 

Further datnln 

. was' 1 .® .r 

pinnae) 


mrsssB 

isle ■ yanr 
itnniunr, 

ri 


ba 

rom 



or ni nvallBl/hi 
aadinustor 


l ia®8 


SUFFOLK 

UTOKb lllGlf .SCHOOL 

II ApproacH. lpnwleli 


ClnalnB (late two waokq 
tltnr . Ilia anpearpnen or 


1020) 


apnearencii or 
atfvartTaj^gtj 



OXFORDSHIRE 



OF Gill LB ' 
kL IIDIICATION 
II recitilrtul Snntenj- 
.. 1. An itiitliiialaaLii: 
atiaraeLlc tanrliar nliln to 
work afrertlwoly as unrl af 
taiini htpchlnu a wide rungn 
P.E. aollvlllDB la aoufihl. 
COl'liEBTON HIGH HClIOOL 

roll *1 com,,, ‘® 1,1,1 11,1 v, ° 
Copl onto n Huiul, lpswiclt IP4 




Dll 

tninilred for I ynnfi .a U'lt;- 
ournry leneher uf OlrlH P.E. 
tu wurh In tlila inixtri eoinpre» 
hanxlvn eithaoj In h vary eut- 
fiBqaful Inoin, . 

Thp school has • ampin play- 
inn. f fnltliti n snorts lisll situ a 
nitllfBvinm’Blum. 

. .. IHnnsa n poly I11 writing 

a laalne aurrlculum vll 

ttlnlla of niisr- xpQcIa 

anntn and nymnnsiiim work, 

J nd' thn names, of two re- 
areas, a.a,e. uleaBe. 
^H^^^RLBOROUOH 

'•ton Road, Wood stack. 

Aw . » • 


Sflf P* , 

bar inn 2, all I 


bar 

Trail 


writing nn- 
vllaa, full 
■lalltlan In 


OF .. OIRLH' 
CDIICATTON 
eiiuirnd Hnntnin- 
qbln iu innt’li some 
rmni-ii. ijTnwlv , nunllfinil 
tenuhera wBlrnnieil. 

I'urnih ntul mntuir HMalln 
nvullnldn from Handtiinciier nt 
tlia school cpnimi'iind (a.n.n, 

Ei*fsa r As u 7Tmvr y am 

BUIIREY 


Aniiiumton forms urn 
nvnllnbln u from. Tint Dlrec- 

f ur . of Education, Eduun- 
Ion DapDriinniit. tflvlc 
Caitlrn. fit Pnlnr'n Hiiuarp. 
Wpi vorliainpton. WVfl 

iRU. tu whom they alinulil 
bn returned wltlilu.10 days 

r if _ this ndvdi'tlHeiiinut. 
NAE plain). 

WolvnrliOiiipliiii la 
nqiml opportunity 
pluyar niiu yarnilUne 
upon in uutli aoxea, 
rnraq and . real sin rq«J 
itblarl pnoplp. (39201) 

1 34 il23l 

Religious Eduoation 
Heads of Department 


nn 

am- 

urn 

all 

tile- 


UKDFOUUHIimU 

m' 

Jutintdtiia lldad, Cnddlnntoii. 
lain. .. .. 

nndmnstnri Mr. O. Kailntii 



throuphoiit tlte School. 

Apply to the Ilaadteaehnr 
. Olvfna tho Iitmni and nudraa 


, ipmni 

non . of two rafarsaf. 
pinnae. 


nybourne Rond. Farnhnin. 

. urroy . • 

CD^prohnnSIvu Mixed 11 - 18. 

HiflulraJ; . for BontQOibnr, 
1 082 - Scale 1 post Teacher, 

BUS Education ;(K.C. 
rrndl- , 

C ton I as date li 


! %V. l cl^UPI*ER 


.n. 1070 - 170 in sixth 
arm 


ulrHil for 8optnmbor IB 
thla wall oBtnbllalind CJam- 
inoalvn upper school Irt 


.or ... 

prohniialvn _ 


pyo. 


E.A. 


nioua 
rerrsd). 

Ctanlng date 10 day 
appearance of . thin , ndvortlae- 


er 




"ITZHARRYB SCHOOL . 
farlhcaurt Roua, . Ablnadon, 
UX14 1NP 
Roll: 1070 . 

Required Tor Bnptombnr 1BBB 

r i tepchor or Girls’ P.E.App- 
y. .Blvlng detalla or qualifies- 
,tl OPS' ■ and . ®*pef switch 


ment. 

L attorn of application noinf- 
nqUiiB. two rqferaoa ta Hand 
TaachBr 'with stamped, 
nddraasnd . envnlopo " 
tails. (39311) 


■ INII I^uu ■ 



deles ^ra.loolitf'far.' 


Application 


.tqqtiethpr 
so dresses 
soon as''i' 


thDf .wjth th« name* and YEOMAN'S BRIDGE flCHC 

Kr. V SwlVjM-fe 


pncii 

ames and 


SURREY - , 


abtoliiabln from 
to the He ' 
a^oql 


>464) 


fa.e.a. 


SCHOOL 


ROTHERHAM, 


ITAN. BDkOyOH 




eft*, pip. 

rn^fr^of if8^S' W» 

lent roc IlTtlne tnoiudlno.n haw 
BpurtJ: HalL ' ) -, .. .. , .„ ; 

^ y - nlst °T nB X 1 

— ' -- - — " "i'ii / - . *• Cours 

■ ■ 1 *< •• ■ . " . • uni," . 

ear vice 



KENT 

COUNTY Ciil'Ni II 
i.nut'A rtuN ni i’a 11 1 mi n 1 
TDNIIIIIIM.T ANII MAl.IINi. 
IHVlHltlN 

A VI I. SI (till) fiCIII It)). 
iii"ii 1 . i>3 11 1 

I ,-nii.il l.nur. Avlrnfilid Ml., 'll 
7.1 1 1 

vacancy run January. 

I *1113 Oft LA III .t r It . li 
I'DSKIIILT. 

Ill -All III' III. I liiOl 'S 
IDIICA Til IN 1)1 I* Ml I Ml N I 
I Si all- 2 nr N. ill.' 3 <lt-|ii-i„lf-iil 
on iiuiillli'. nlluiu- nml 
rkpi-rli'iii r) 

A|>|illrntitiiii art- ln\lti-il f>-l 
tlir iditiM- vai .1111 1 I hi- hi- 
1 mini niiptliAiil oliunlil hr a 
I nni in- 1' with a iilllili'nl I»rti h • 
liriiiinit, <|iiini (iri'niiml rnlu- 
I liiivtlllim. Iilti-ml 111 |>aitiii'nl 

.'(Ira, ->viii|int lu-l (• Uildi'i it.iml 

lull mill I he -iliilttv In • UIII ■ 

■ mill lr.it ■* i-aillv wltit I hlliti rn 
III mliif I Inn in ki'iiiiiiIiIiiii nml 
■■iiliiillll il l■l••alllv lia-ieil • lit 1 1 
• ' 11 1 ii ul ul liflliiliini I ilm nl inn. 
Im lltillim help with -ii In ml 

iiiiiilillilli'i. Iir'ahr Mill he r« 

I n- 1 Ir.l In lake lull part lit Un- 
lit- (if tin- nil.nnl . 

Dll- XI llliill 11 lllll.ltril In 11 

S li-Amillt mlileiill.il ill i'ii 
l Villi lex N.W. uf M <■■•! mil ill •• 
h lullv i-iiiuiiri-lirnilve In ilii* 
rirsf iwii yi-.irx. At the niiti i.f 
13+ mi mi* a III r r iiuplli Willi 
tile iiei'i-xnarv nhllltv. .tin llii.li- 
nml iiiitniitliil fur kiIviiiii i-il 
level 1 iiurien triiiiiti<r tu tine 
til lour ti|i)if-r nihnnln; the re- 
ntnlninu mulurltv liilluwlnii 
rnuritrs Innilluu In fi.lM'. '•»' 
Invel (l.K.Ii. nml niinie mm - 
nxnmlnatlonn (uitrxnx. 

AtiplIi iiUuii xllntiltl tie iniuii* 
liy Iniiur lu Uie 1 1 ■■‘iilinaii er . 
ntiitllKI rrli-v.int |ir rmill.il lie . 
till In. triilitlnti nml iiiuitltli 11 • 
tltiiii. tiianther with llte 
ininien of tan reteieen. 
13937 7 I 1344 III 


SOLIHULL 

EDUCATION DF.i’A UTM LNT 
LODE HEATH NCIIOOI. 

Lodo Lane. Kolllintt- Wait 
Midlands 

ronulrcd for Hnptnmtier 1UH2. 
HEAD OF II. E. IIUI'AIIT- 
MENT Scale 2. 

Apply by latter tn the 
Haadmaator ut thn nchixil ax 
noon nn posxlble. 

(39461 ) I 344 IB 

SURREY 

RDU CATJO N COM f^.ITT r.f. 


IIINCHLEY^iyOOI) 


-- JOlfNTY 

HECONUAIlV 
Claynate Latin, lllnthlny Wtutii 
< 12 - 16) 

HEAD OF lll'.l.KHOUS 
EDUCATION tiraln 3 rnqulreil 
Nnpt. tiradiiuie iirnfnrrril. Tn 
urnnitlnii l)i<|iartiueut nml 
t nucli BiihjDi-t llirotiiitiuiit 
xeliunl to O anil Util, levul. 
Apply tn lleml by letier 
th 2 raferer-Hl. (3U3 1 8) 

1344 I H 


DEVON 

l.lrnxe xre ill«|i|nve,| n,l%ei|(, r . 
mem mi pn,|» ',3 13'il'IUi 
1344.14 

Cl WENT 

1 IH'NI V < 'I II 'Ni l l 
NT l) II II 1 1 11 ,1 

( 1 IM I'll I III Nsl\ | -( hi hi I 

<11 - 1 M 

HI l.llllllUS l.ltl'l 'A | ION 
III IJUIIII.I) 1 OK lo -'ri-lr III ■ 
lu'i I '*n Jf Siii-ll- .ii I iiih nie 111- 
v tlf'l Hum iln.illlte.i le.iiluni 
for (lie ( ■ 1 1 1 ■■ ■• Iiiii laimuli'i ■ 
r.i lr.it li mn-i Dip pIiiiIii 
M ill 1 1 1 r.uiiie limn |) . |rs. An 
Intel ext in llir 1 einnllal ■ lillit 
vmiiiI.I In- nn n,|v iiptinie 

Ai-pll, nt l.-u I ■ ■■ 111 x .mil 

further tnfin inn) l.iu ulinr 
nvnllnlile. - ,l>t nimiM r limn nm 
Mire. Im n| ! lilt, nl !■•■■ . t iinntli 
tmll I'Uiilirnn oitriil Nl'4-t 
.'HI. nn ie.el|,i ..I n 1 r . _ 
xlninlil tie rrliirupil It, Mm 
limiliii.iilr 1 , i.tll.Y' M l.l t-l.l.t 

KENT 

I "Ol IN I Y 1 .1 II IN 1 || 

I IM't A I ION III |<AI( (Ml N I 
1,11 I INI. HAM DIVISION 
IIAINIIAM MARK 
1,11 AMM All hi HI t( i| 
llriplll'rit fill’ -.ejit emlirr, .1 
tlinilinlte |ti ten. it llelluliitix 
I. liu. .ill,, n li, 'A' level nml 
runt rlliut r it. Dm hut Ini Kin- 
illrx le. nil III trnr'i I - 3. All 
ellltllixlnlli Miiinlileer Vtllli 
annmiF.i <t| tlir wiilei nl.,. 
rtlfli nme uf tin- null |ei I In .i 
xiliunl l« atitiuhl 

'llte xt li.i.il lx n '1 f.e. l a )*IU 
Im liiilliiii 'Jin In f,lli luriio 
• ii-.'.lin nilimnl >p|n llir 

iit.til xinintiiiii In tlx own 
ilMiuilila wllli extr iixlve Ini III. 
(lex fur xilenie. unnmx nml 
Iiillurnt m II V I Ilex 

I m tlier ifelnlln fruni. -in. I 
njiptli ntliina illreitlt in, ihn 
Ifrailiiiailnr . Dr. K. Keen, 
Knlnliniii Murk firaiiimar 
Si IiiiuI. I'ninii l.nite. IlnliilKini. 
Knilt MI.H V A.I . I.VI.SHfil 

.44422 

NORFOLK 


Rt.YTH JI'.K SCHOOL 
St. Cleineiilx Hill. 
Norwich 

No. no Hull. 1370 

*1 CAI Tfi.lt OI HLI.IGIOI'S 
I ; l)UC A TION 

Well (ilinllflril. Itetpiirril 
lur He|»teiiilii-r. I*.IH2. nlill- 
Ity to offer llixturv ntiil/ur 
(.'Inxxiial ( :i v 1 1 Ixnt Imi .in 

ml vniil mu- . 




Heads of Deparimanl 

KENT 

M ATWy* 0 * - ' &S?. L 
*rii|| BUG 1 

W'Tflm'fffcJsx-.. 

ii.a.r’.'j.iBf'Sia'.a 
.™" ,, SS7 Ks»s 

are inure lilipurlonl. 

< '■■‘"fid caiiilMato wufh. fw>, 
imi'irit tu ru.ordinBtx.55 P' 
o-lnp ull tlta Bpil/Jr-. . ,ni * *t- 
"» 1; ' x i- 1 imiii hnt *b C ruiit , ri, , P 

pri-lienxl vn hi thn filXi?*' 
u"ir«. Ai ihn Im oi» iff 

PrpTRndffigOT.a.rt 

level nml L.B.E. ' 0 

;y»3^'» ol,ci,p ym 


Applb ntlini 
fiirlimi delnllh 


(with 2 rnfereuxl. (3!) 


fornix mill 

I ruin mill 

reliirneil lit tin- llenilnilx- 
Irexx nl tlu* hi linn I 
(340011 134422 


Scale 2 Posts and above 


BERKSHIRE 

COMPREHENSIVE 
.Tltnlcliaiii. 


KC 

Stun 


.mnov Lana 

rai 1 "" 

( 1 I ■ IB iiilKmi i-ontpr 

MirmA. .w'bv ... >.n r ... 

HpqiiHiiiip fur the imniiilxiiUnii 
id plumilnii uf tlm turn IiIiiii 



NORTH YOHKHIIIKK 
COUNTY COUNCIL 
LASING WOLI) SCHOOL 
York Road. Enxiimw ulil. York 
YO6 SIT- 

I I - 19 rural >»mi>relimixlvr 
tlrouii 1 1 . 

Itenulred fur Seuieiulini 
ir of 

ATKIN 

AlillIH nlltin fornix illtrl 
Illrtllftr ilelniU nvnllnlile Until 
(lie llonilnmxir r ill the m Imiii 
(N.n.e. ulnnkel in whuni inlti* 

i llhtnil fliruix mil 1 1 Ilii I He re. 
tirunil williln 14 Hnvx ul the 

uf thin iiilvri jlxi*. 


lem her 

linn:/ 


r Heiiteiiilirr 1 'IHV! . 
ul Itri.lOIOOS 

V Sr nle I (nisi. 




1422 


teacher ror appllrdtliiu furin 
tnan). CtufiliiR dnie June 7. 
lierkalilrn Cniirtly (Jiiuindl In 
uii nriuul itliiiiirtuillly nm- 
uloynr, <4434 1) I3442U 


v OH I ft 


Scale 1 Posts 


BRUNT 

DNUQN nemo uo 11 of 


iniuTuirary well iiiiiiUileil xjie- 

' lixl fur RI:|. lOIlilIN s'lli- 
In 1 nnli Ihtite 111 nn ni* 
de|in» I hi nil inruiMiHfoit 

mil. 


CONVENT OF Jl'.NDH dr 
MARY liiaTi sen cio 1 . 
cruwn f riik roiiii, Nvyin 
(Roll 10 13, it-l/li Girl 1 x 
nuiuprcilintiNlvni 
Uiuiulrnd frpni Hnpiemiier 
Unman C.uiIiuIik Ten 


4 LI* 


.emlior 

(Nunle I), l*i hnnIm In the 
IniirlilDU ul, RrMuiiiiix Lilui rt- 
tluii. ratiitllunlnn Nhoitld lin 

M lined In tn pi'll nil nunx anil 
111 km. liny I In Ii dN ii nei imiii 
ntil>.)ei:t would lie nu ndvmi- 
* 0 Q n . 

l.rillilnii Allownitiie of t'fpll 
iinr annum In imynltln. IIi'piiI 
In ruiitliininiilully I'liinmhleil 10 
multl-utiUtirnl ed lien Hull. 

Aimllcntiiin fornix Ix.n.e.i, 
tibtniualile from .tIim llnnil 

CUMBRIA. 


men I 



vyuii 



_ -.jnies bp 

T5SS 

n wall antabjUnod a 
apart man t, flcela I. 
plication j furnia 


wall antab 
artn 

. .. . flon 

rurthar dal 

outnlnod rram tlmjluai 
iurnnd within 


A* 

end 


cnit 

. »ud. tu 
returned Within B wnnka 
>f tlila ad' 




forma ere 
and retrpable 
inter at the 

TO 


a& jgsrramf 

CAMBRIDOESfURE 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


SBC SCIENCE 
Motlnued 


OXFORIIHIHKK 

(flnitiH 141 II nileml. J'.MMI 

i illillln III 3 I lul lx. | I- I.'), nip 
llilinr h< Until in- I'D 
<i»iuii’pil roi' uni, v-.ui iii.lv a 
tnini 

•iiivl 

live _ . ... 

Ihn toiiliiil. , iiiii lu lie llx i rp. 
I'nxeil Ini 1 ve in a Hull uf Cnin- 
miiiiltv. The nhllltv to ti-in l» 
HI nil Ntlm nml levelx |x 
xininllt, Tlini e is IIip lie>inlll 
of a well-PNlntillxhe.l prill en- 
xlniial tnturliiu ai lienie 

Mill tinriii ulnrx umv lie 
iilitilliieil ami letier" of an- 
Ullrnllolt \vli| i'ii ilii 1 11 Id Im llllle 
■I nn II M 1 ntlini" uml expel mm e 
Klileilixr wltll Iwii nniuex rur 

[ Klein n in phi mill r*» ill'll llir 
>rii)e||iMl williln fiiiirti-en ilny" 
nl lids nil vei I inuliimil . N A I. 
Illume. 

UAIITHOI.OMI.VV hi Tit II 1 1 . 
Wltimy It nml. Ivinnlmin 
(iroiip If. I I It mi 1 nil 
Knillilrdl lltuil Meplemhur 
IIIHU for ime v*'ur due In 
xni-intdiilnnl, n npni lullxl 
lenrher uf RfiltiiiiniN tilioii- 
lion f Siain 1 1 who ix wIiDmi 
tu uffer Hitoihiir ouhln 1 as a 
■ulnilitinry. ApiiKi uiiiuix Irmn 
uunlllleil li. f:. xfH-i:lillJ"tH 
anehluu 11 unrl -time a| , |iul |> j 
/III nlmi be 


■nl \yiif nlmi be ■-fiiiiuii"i 
lur Dior delqll" ilm uvilll- 
(ililn from the jleiKliuniliiir. lo 


Intlnrx ol npiiib ntliiii* 
...... ...rnw). Imliullnii n 1 iirrl- 

tiiluin vnne ami llte nniiteu or 
/o relnreex. eboiilii l«e wj|i 

IPBdfl . 


drnd .,fpr, _ Heninmbar. *W» relernex. ehroibl bn sent 
!' q Ruallrlqd full-lliiin IlG* ek boom 1 ax poxxlblr. H.A-L. 
OU8 NT U DISS SPECIAL. IHreafl. <30362) 1344113 


(Ol'dl.lTAN IlflRfimlll 

»N^#AW..v«pjr*Vif 

(Hcale.l.). required for Mepleiii- 


188. for 


tint . 

yeara, vol. cant, mixed 

nxchar of 
EBle.it, to 


teecli aublerl 
Bchoul to. O' 


one year 

caver anrohdnteid and to 
' irt tliruuphout lim 


lUNTINGDON AREA 
Uncnlnabroake School. 

^ntlnadon, Ctmbl. 

1, vol, cant. 1 __ 

R E , i5i p VR rurtRnr^Uoialln a'rri rn avnlluhl*i 

th e deparlman f 'Th rmJohQU t* 1 the p W" ,pl a? *-*■»■*■ J'S'"'.'*' 1 ' 

aohbol .(Including , 'AMnvai 


far 


iVeu^fra cl* nr’ of " tliuj Ijc'libol . 


y- developed .camprehan 
chooi In outatandfiq 
Buntlnodon 


ttflrai 


dale. 

8401 


... »."vgry active community 

.nlNNlNGTON ■ ; service programme which per- 1 

COMPREHENSIVE BCHbpL ,• - •••,-, • ■ nonV appoint 6d.i. would ■ bC' r a- ■ 

- ■ ^wtcKsttiiis: : j w 

T Kh n * O HA '. V A SN]/' 7' A r, T ATHEt'STaN^ HCBOOt. ... lw P Q Q 'r.rBr*^. “. d ,oon 

•• ^.waMr.'&Yr^.K ! 7 .• UMF?. -WrVritm 

•..cover maternity " leevo, 1 - The.' •' , i- v . • '■ -7,. 

: ia-j.$ f ompreHd^4ive ; - 

; _L: • . 1 ‘ • • : surrhiy • , ' 


alva school 
tine serving _ 
nel^hbauchogd. ■ 

m: 


Rural Science 


ng sot. 
and 


eulum 

two referees,' 


ENFIELD - 

l6ndo£i Boaauart oy 


mgasm-'::'' 


MERTON 

M”TtS'ON n0,lOUOH ° P 
me Aims 
SCHOOL . 

Lake road. Wimbledon. 
London S\V 1 9 7HB ' 
Hr an teacher; Mice H. D. 
Whale. M.A. 

Tnli Oi-: 

Age rono 

No. nn ri 

arc In the 6th Farm 
Itnqulrod for Sc 
I BBS HEAD OF SCI 
PAKTMENT, Scale 


LODOE HIGH 


946 2908 

nge rone; JS-IB glrle 
No. ."(i.rutl^ 7S0 of wbon )60 

HEAD OF SCiipRcff^ nfc 
4 who will 


fully comprehenelve idioal 
lor alrle. There era men 
full-tltno tench ere in the De- 
partment. Pliyxlce. Charalitry 
and Blolaay ora taught ep to 
'A' level. In Phyelcs. the Nal- 
finld xyllnbue le followed far 
'<)* in vol and C.S.E. Lone an 
A I Iowa lire £789. Legal K- 
liniixrx und oeilatance lawerdi 
rnnmvul cepeneae will baron- 
Bldnred In epprovad ceut. 

AppUrailun ror me cad 
furiiirr partlrulore or the mn 
are available from the Seed- 
trnclinr ul the above eddrci- 
xnx. I'lnoao enrloee e lUfOM 
ddrironxnd rnvnlopa. (flBSSSl 


SHEFFIELD 



foMDON BOROUGH OF 

ifeH^PoOL 

BW Avenue,. Henwell. 
LoMl° n ' rt w ' srptumbar. 

W If 1 teacher af Phyalce able 
■■ach throughout the 
1® V "m clod inn CKF. 'O' and 
COUP06X. All IiitorKHt 
"riertronlci woultl be nsn- 
in, ®g5eal lent fudlUInH. 
nil- g poet In uvulinblu 
. Appropriately uiiulllleil 
WM . if 'but appllrnlloiia urn 
InvllSd from now ui»- 
■IW._ ,1 |i, a prufKHHlon. 

“fifepisja: KonPtii.i 
1 

ESSEX 


11 MVEfier nniK 


rI,U! 

iSalHS^O f* 1 '* 1 " 260 + 

SBftOTfcALB*. + 

PH inn Frlnqe Allowumc 


Expnrlnnnid 
Inncli to 'K* 


His. „ 

Bcptember 

Pjjj ll ®g5ole~9. fir" 3 lur m- 
epanalb**l tlos aa H"«)f"l In 
Jj7, t Department- 90 -a 


■unci' add roe: 


VltIMI Ulltl 

„„ __Jreaann anil lulu- 
0*000 oumboro of referrim m 
Huateichar Uoolxrnp a.u.n. 
Time)- ORA YK CONVENT 
HJOH SCHOOL 

1 Avenue. Ornyo, HMI7 


a K: 


filV 0375 76173 
fEACHER fl i r p"cH EMISTHV 


AND HIOLOOV Scale 2 
Hoqulrad September, tu 'O 
■nd C.9.B. level. 

Appllcatlane with rurrimi- 
lum vllee to Hoadnilntrebe 
Koalecep a.e.e. plauau). 

OREAT BADDOW SCHOOL 
IHiKlald Road, Groat 
Biddow. Ch elms lord 
Tel: Chal^tarord 69821 


OF SCIENCE Scale 


(Roll Xi _ 

JEACKER 

Gradueta to tearh Fliyxive uu 
lo 'A' level and Cum hi nml 
Science In Lower Hrlionl . 
atccr Inierentx would Im 
titled. 


ST. MARTIN SCHOOL 
Hinging IIIII Lane, Ilm 


Hinging 
Brentwood 
Tel: 0977 997650 


lilt 


moll 1060) 

SECOND IN CHEMISTRY 
Sain 9 

Riqulrnd September. Bui und 
Ii papular end very nucmnerul 
dipertment ta iharo In 
leeching la university nmr- 


Trl". 0749 3 
(18-19 mile 

llriiiilrril 


N.'O.B. >»0) 
lur S*p.lj 


inn level. 

For the above two puxlN 
curriculum vltaa anil iiumns ur 
two rafereea lu liuudiDai-liiir 

HARINGEY 

^o W o'l LLIAM 1 

Lujqhnm Rond, Lainlun NIB 

Si.r.WKi.'v,,.,.' 


flu ml uf hiilpin'*. u j i» I 

MI'S. A pul trillion* invliedhr 1 
HU" key UIIM frum well qed- 1 
II led uradiialjie who cre w- 
iilila lit leuililntl 
1'livxlt x to all I'.yulk. Tfce W* 
"lul uPDllroiit wlllb* ii- 
leil lu r.o-iirdliiilc'” 
ck uf till' litre* IICCO* 01 


P»v» j|e“ n 1 0 w'lVliin E 7 a ‘J 

Asrt&silan In U10 flrxl In- 

■fffi. V 1 " Keiitl- 

fn'S.ii.i l ' ,P ™>b*‘ll "(lull 


IK XX I II I uppllruiit wiii or .. >. ABPiirai one In ilm r 

h! ,l Um , r"Viiro Sevnlopminl ^ I troop 1 QRE£n (if HI Of) 
Ihn ht'lHMil- ipd m fhi* H, rt Lnnu . Lund 1 

• ' iiniiillx uro "ITvellitlc ■ iflced Coi,tn»i.*«.t u .. * 


luriliei- dniiillji 
ilutn: fimrlreii W- 

sar r .m?! * 


lull N 22 
io*C.S B, 1,1 ° 1,11 tn* 

rtfe^r^ 2 .^4** I* 11 hvoii- 

- for ‘nn. 19H 2/113 vein- 


Scale 2 Posts and above I « TS 5j. 


only ■■■«■ isnqoia vein' 

Wflllnou. - -Vi I nbl f rniiilldfilM 
rwj" proeiileo Ihn Mucin 
Kurin ’ T- nn!ttSSF a «' lull* I' 

aUF®-"-* " 


AVON COUNTY 

1(1112. ur "TL. ’jfiobW* 

r.r®aHs3ges 

Ul l" 1 1 II III II „^,‘Vnn d 0 f Blofo BT JL 

iriirrlt ulum vjino “ 110|)B ^ 

m 

partlrulure. (3B87">. . 


Mrafflo?" Allttwenne 

llomnv 


L74U 


„l5w23 v K! Kk nnmiwc - ioii'jj, 

BeriSoSi, PJ , l ,r "veil i nxnx. 

*r«TSS»“ ‘-fflvr’i.s.wjK 


i’urin 


Ulltl 


SP®3SSSt? v "v iW|;, p 
g aSAJV^," 
JJRTFORDaumK 


- HCHIOOI. 
Gurn tun. 

•—T'. Grauti- 
It) Im 2nd 
inartmiutl . 
Ruble np- 




HARINGEY 

hi! A 1 . l,, ° a ‘ C P : A M ' Nixon, 
lituir 

A wnll qua I If | or, . ...... 

(iiii-eU Km cl i nr to bn reanonr!' 
bln fur the loochlnn or"B?5A!‘ 

Su. Iho school? A 

!wu ll1K y ° 

und Iho jio r4<in unpointed ufm 
| 1 “ v " r ,,, e udd | lion □ 1 roapoefbi i ! 

Ill'll!)/. oru " ,,lall, n tho new feel. 

Popular subject 
III Ilm fourth year and than 

J? “ tradition of 'a' 

m«St.* 0aCh,nB ln th0 OopeA. 
It IH oximetod that eoaii 

3L a%tM V' o f TO2& 

f^fS^SrP and including 
payiVblo?' 1 " A " ownnCn C739 

; S SW" avte.e from 
['dun.ed 1 e'; f 

C miii kilo I o r will bo glvon an 
ut nn work ,H,V ■°° ,h " “hoKI 
THE linAYTON SCHOOL 
N A d 6TJ° rC Hoa,J ' T f>Ronhain 
Tel: Ol-flDO 0994 
II - IB Yoare Co-educational. 

"(jplwlfh 180+ In the 
Sixth Form 

BIOLOGY TEACHER (Scale 9) 
required Tor one veer from 
September. 1982, to he r™ 
■nonxlblo ror the subject up 
to G.C.E. A’ level. Thore *ri 
nix well provided laboratories 
'■viced by three Technicians 
und the separata sciences are 
taught to Advanced Level? 
Cmirsae In Biology are paou- 
lar and fully eubacrlbed. Tha 
Hrhuul which le pleasantly 
situated alongside the River 
l.eu, linn davclopad e special 
ininrest end Involvement in 
Community Education and hoe 
inriimc the focal point or the 
bi'al aron. Thu vacancy erleae 
rruni t h k temporary second - 
mu n t ol tlm llaldar. 

Priority Allowancei 
£20 l/EB 76. London Allo- 
wance £760 imyable. 

Firman apply by latter to 
the liradteaciiar aa soon as 
nuaelbla glvinu full particulare 
and thn iiamsa of two profaa- 
itloiiul rarnreo*. 

Ilarinany ih a, 
t unity employ nr 


ixiul rarnreo*. 

Ilarinany m an equal oppor- 
lllly nmploynr. 135313) 

134880 


HERTFORDSHIRE 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
A 1 1! a n L n A l'« b fi n'n? 


CHUOL 
ana, St 


Hniiiemlinr. ta une: 
t<*nr|iliin tif I'liyufL-g to, 
li'Vidx wltll xanm Physical Sc 
unri' In tlm l.iiwor School. * 
I-'irin or 200. Brain 2 
tivallulilK lur nullabln n 
II led mid iixiii-rlaiicnd ua 
■ini*,. 


Graduate required 
let in t) 

tjysicnJ fle^ 

POHt 
quel- 
L'andi- 


tu Haadmia- 
rk-u- 


Applli-ullim* 

tmex. i nun i inn- with cur 
Imiii vltau and copies of i 
■'••nt li-xtimouliilx and nomoa 
mill uUili-en>m* i»r 2 rornrPaH. 
1 343171 134820 

HERTFORDSHIRE 

rniiNTY council 

LAST IILRTM U1VIHION 
Till: I IVKNTIIUHI'E SCHOOL 
oniitlirldu,- Rnail. 
Hnwlii'ldimwiirt li , llnrtn CM 2 1 

mix 

Itciliilri'd fui' Suuininliiir 1082 
n wult qintliflnu nml nxpnrl- 
ntiri-tl gi'itilniilK fur I In) |inei tif 
llftiil uf ( imuilHiry Si:nln 3: 
An iiiii* niiiliiixliiHtlr lx nuunlit 
with iiiitvcn iKut-hinii nblllly 
tu l«nr|t ni'i'tiNN ihn line nml 
illillltv rutuiiiN up tu 'A' Invpi, 
Tlm xt:liiiiil very iiujiiilnr oil 
pnriiiilnl timin' lx iilunanntly 
re 1 1 ii ret in | mi llui IlurlH/ KseoX 
Inirilri' mill niinllriiifl fur lliu 
1 .■ tllililll ITIiUln Alluwnilt n. 

‘ter, r — 

Ihiiikh aiiil.liiulu 

vlinu. (tlinidu nn 

■iniit iix Hiiuii im iMiasllilo tn 
Ilm I IiiiuI uiiiNtni' nt Ilm acllmil. 

1 34 820 


Aiuilli ill lull liv inttnr, (iiipt- 
Itni iwu it i ii i une anil .liiu|uil Inn 
t'liri'ii'i ‘ 

•tj'iil a 

Ilm lit .. 

(351)44) 


HIIUOPfllXIIlE 

EDUCATION COMMITHB 
IMIOENIX HGIICIOI. _ , 

W ' 

i 


jinr^Ilunil, Dawloy, Tnirord 
AcilLIl OF HCIENCE Scalo 


will) rn xiii ms ll{l lit y for Into 

ni'ii l tiri HiJriioi 


I'tniiiirnil 

10 


II IllWRI' BL'IlUOl 
fur Huptnmbiir. 


■nil r ii 

riii-lbcr iln l a lie from tlio 
llniul (H.A.i:.). c4»»B-41 i34aa<> 


IJd c'Bf 1 level". 

and 




BERKSHIRE 
Kerkii" ^i-Vnl-lS fl.irW' 

ur?}?*L 81 .uv,iieetw; , 


plo«00 *Pfi]jflber 


Hoads of Dopartment 


HSBEX 




JN L'OIJNTY HIGH 


ton flUorft <;fiM:ton-M(t .«■«( 

ITiiS'l Hcrr.NCT. ; 

anulrnd Nnpi ember, Ifead Ot 
turul Stud Inn tu iluyeluu 
irttefl. bill vuriuri unit. H, “ a 
a liable, but 'firm appoint ■ 
nilt < ttnelderiMi. 

Apply Inuneciiatnlv by InWM 
IfnuUmnutt'r. wlln il.v- «Wl 




oust. I n " d "moth®'%‘'S»fWS 

srlaiuA JVuregl cquf'J 


City of Coventry 

Whitley Abbey Mixed Comprehensive School, 
ftnbey Road CV34BD {1 550 on roll) 

BIOLOGY specialist 

ESSfe? Soptembsr 1982) Seals t, loleach up to 5th 

physics specialist 

1 1 ftqulred to teaoh up to 0th form 'A' level standard. 

involve combined Science to lower school 
J^wT i8h ®d oommltment toexlracurrteulBrcourae 

bean additional raoommendetion. 

squaDflea. 

addresses ofiwo 1 «Jucallonal referees to 

tha Head Taachor st the school within 10 
days of appearance of advertisement. 



Coventry 


KIRKLE&S 

aiFsa"" 1 

Jbury Roed, 

JLA h0 “ lon ' Dewsbury WF19 
‘REF. 7)4) 

PHYaiGB apa 5 ,0 . ( l * 
CHEM^TRY to ?Q' “fiKT 

Bg^nr>%aE 

LONDON " 

WBlI^uxi?/, 5i apt «g ,b »r, 1982. 
Quallflid oraduate Phviil 

tKf. ■ S"SSo n .' l, „ , ImbSr.' 1 -!; 

(Independent School - 

p°pT.i (. fi'BV ° r * nt i..H8 

SUFFOLK 

sch&1 MAWOW upper 

Avenue, Havarhlll. 

ip.tas'jsa.'p.s. '{ffls :s 

i aoa t8 ^ ma J. t J ar h V 95th May, 

PhoSe f^WA'S? 

detail. Haverhill 700301. 
i. I,- L QCB J houalng authority 
J? P/oP®r«0 to give aympathe- 
Ur conaidaratlon to the provi- 
sion of housing for taaahara. 

i&jsa* lewan « ioh 

R“3Hl r 6a for Baptomber, 
}982. „ teacher or Biology 
(Scale 2) os second In Biology 
Doper intent. Teaching to ‘A* 


level available. 

, Application forma and 
further detalla available from 
the Headteacher at the school 
olaaaa) to whom they 
should be returned ae soon aa 
possible, (38073) 134890 

SUTTON 

LONDON BOROUGH OF 
SUTTON 

C A RBI1 ALTON HIOH 
SCHOOL FOR GIRLS 
/eat Street, Caraholton. 


AVON 

COUNTY OF AVON 

ST. GEORGE SCHOOL 

Russoll Town Avenuo 

Bristol BBS 9,1 H 

Required for September I9B2 


Lower School alts wltR full 
laboratory accommodation. 
Candidates must be prepnrad 
to play a Tull part ln a struc- 
tured pastoral ayata 

Application! by 

the Headmeater, with full da 


.cations J £y "Vetter 

idmeater, with rull 

tails and the namns of two 
rafereea. (39222) 134832 


AVON 

COUNTY OF AVON 
KINGGFIELD SCHOOL 
Brook Road ' 

BrlK 


k Road, Kl < 

3 1 nsi4 43 
Comp ref n 


US wood, 

■ naive i Sixth 


(urray. 

Required Haptei 
taaolier of chomi 


nbor IBB2 a 
to Join a 
well- 


taaolier or chemistry 
large .team within _ 
established aclonca depart 

W: tf O ' ° B an d th ” ' b ^°I alreV 


each the subject 
and 'A' lavbi, 
with same general 
md two. 
or sult- 
cant. 

ease apply In writing to 
the headteacher giving currl- 


topethar 

science 

Scalo 

m *% QUB 


vuluin 
and na< 
fnreee 


3 suable 

ilf Fleet appilD 

Jteachor 1 glvL 

vltua and the names 

rwaiK or "ii-ajo 


Mixed Compr 
Form 230+ 

M,?-!,'-.. yf ".is K"S“ 

the school. 

Graduate Chemist (Scale I) 
fwlth auppordng Phyaiea) to 
teach throughout the school 
on 1 year fixed terra cant ract 
front September, 1982. • . 
Apply In full (no forma) 
Ith curriculum vitae , and 


wl... 

names and 
refareea to .. 

mediately. Fur 

receipt of a. a. a. (39 


reason of two 
idmaater, Im- 
aila an 

^34829 


'fh° 


WALTHAM FOREST 

LONDON BOROUGH OF 
WALTHAM FOREST 
An equal opportunity 
nmployer 

Tiio Oorough la within easy 


ranch or Cantral London and 

_ ... Epplno Foreat. 

London Addition to salary 


burdarod by 




ON SENIOR HIOH 

school for amts 

^oUvorth Road, London Ell 

ifaad teachari Dr A. 1 M. Black 
Raqulfcd for Boptembor 1882 
ur ax jioon as pnaalble therar- 
tor TEACHER OF BIOLOGY 
Scalo 2 In tlila coinprahanalva 
school for puplla aged 14*18 
years (730 on rail). Oraduatq 
run u I rad tn Join a auccoasful 
tlopnrtmant with . ascallent 
luboratury facliltlaa. The 
tonclmr appointed will be 


BARNET 

LONDON BOROUGH OF 

FINCHLEY MANOR HILL 
SCHOOL 

fSRUGJf WtS!”'" *' 


Intern -In Genaral Bcjance 
with younger puplla end qbli* 
Ity to teach Child Develop- 
ment coursoa a strong recom- 
mendation. Graduate pre- 
ferred. 

In approved caaaa aaalat- 
ance may bn given towards 
the payment of removal ex- 
pamea and aeparatian alia. 


wancea 

Apply In writing 
Teacher With full 


to Heed 

c.v. and 

names _of ^ two ‘‘■/HUAi 

S.A.E. (39432) 1 134822 


BEDFORDSHIRE 


R.C, 


promotion atop for a taechar 
wltll eventual Head-of-De- 
aaplrallona. 
of application with 
curriculum vltaa directly to. 
the Headteachar, aa soon aa 
■aalblo cpclaalng .the names 


partmont aaplrotlpna. 

Lc"- - ' 

Icuium v 

ftiJ d i«i_ 

and oddrBaaoa".°?A04^H SWbq 


Uottqr 
ului 

‘ 1 

uaaaiblo one 
of two. refereoa 4 


WARWICKSHIRE 

N0RT g C L H E A 1 O I E? 0T0N . 

d.flOO on roll) V : 

Scale 2, vvlth experience to 
•A* and 'S' level, , 

r.ftBSf'J.'KIj. 

KWoW‘° n 


. „„ Ban tent bar, 

18 Si, a Teacher or Mathame- 
tlca end Sciatica. Scale 1, 8ae 

agracA^aa^^Hii 

BEDFORDSHIRE 

SOUTHERN AREA - ■ ■ 

CEDARS UFPEn SCHOOL A 
COMMUNITY COLLEOB. 

NORi lloo includaa 840 In 
Sixth Form ■ 

Reoulrod-: for Baptembar. 

1989, a teacher of Phyalca 
(Scale 1), to Join a strong and 

S?T*w-/to^ 

ment of lB atafr, Work 
throuflhfi - * ” 

from 
level 


i about , the , .ape rahgo 
C88 and ”o‘ level to 'A' 
■a,., and Oxbridge entry. A 
particular tntoreat In Electro- 
nic* (quid ba valuable Since 
Electronic, Svatomi la nn 
eetabllahed A r Java! course . 
The Science and Techno log) 
areas .lie adjacent- to 


other In” a newly com^latec 
black with a full ran 90 


'^Appflcartin' forma ■ dhtn‘h- 
eblH frOm and returnable to 

BERKSHIRE ' 

«»i«!as*sss , Bb' 

BDA _ 


Scale 1 Post! 


fringe. House-baaed peitoral 


l rehenafvq«hoorrtr rtH 


65 


AVON COUNTY 

gOWNEND SCHOOL 
North V'ew. Staple IIIII, 

ana a 

:!i f'* 0 !"-™ 1 ■*■*"- 

u«W. , 5fi on by ’otter to the 
Head Teacher enclosing a cur- 

of .SS v, V ,B “ n ” ‘ ljo namax 
Po«ilh?e. r “ rOPOes ,Qon « 

Downand School la a new 
ri.m.-B 1 '®"?. Co-aducatlorel 
£SH b JS ®"S°, r,dQ n' School and 
tnno J °P®nlnB In Septomber. 

saa^wa^vJ 
suftyr 11 Hfll ■tBsafti 

AVON 

W«jl»wey la an 11 - (8 mixed 

5?.5fK* l IfW ,w F “th 001 of 1230 

P“py"' 2 1 3 of whom are ln 
the Sixth Form. Tha school 
■laa in a pleaeant area midway 
between Bristol and Datl,. 

,. for Septombor. 

UVwmmiEd ttMK 

loach ""the eubject ' Vhroughou j 
the achool. end G.C.E. 'A f 

KlSl.'.SK*'"' - "“‘TsRSWSte 

approaches are used In the 
early year;, end a contribu- 
tion to eyllabua davalapmant 
la sought. The department (a 
well equipped "and there is 
technical assistance. 

Ploqao apply Irnmodlately to 
tha Hoad, giving usual da- 

twcT ri^araea 1 . f-fsoSs? 1 *| 2^4 8S2 


BERKSHIRE 

fT BERNARD’S CONVENT 
} A L8noI-y llnnd, Slough. HL3 

K;® ?' 1°9 (6th farm — 3001 

&&& o^fc Pt ”! nh " r ' 1 9 * ‘ 

AldoU Baled 

NSffi kTff ‘A. V8,S 

“2? KiiVnto 

Bctonce In lower achool. 

letter with detalla 

*5 tK- d ,7 B, "(»» of 2 rafereea 
IlonUmlmlrqaa (mb). 
Closing date May 2B. Burk. 

County Council la it 

?SB9'Bf ppor ‘ un,ty om ri%Va 


CAMBRIDGESHIRE 
NORTHERN AREA 
ARTHUR MELLOWS 
VILLAGE COLLEGE 
Flolpstrtn Rond. Gllntou. 

Pater borough . |*E6 TJX 
Tel: rotarborough 339839 
Warden: Mr L. V. Luwlnua 
Group 1 1 . nail 1 too 
Required fur September 1982 
un assistant teacher of Dlolii- 

B y and Chemistry iScaln I > tu 
nach up to C.S.E. and 'O' 
level. It would be an idvan- 
tagq to offer one or these 
aubjecte la 'A' level. Tho Sci- 
ence Faculty hae olght fully 
equipped laboraturlea and a 
rural studlen unit. Posaiblllty 
of assistant a with haualna In 
appraprlato caaaa. 

Please apply by letter en- 
closing curriculum vitae and 
trio nnmaa and editresses of 
two referees direct la the 
warden at tha above address 
as soon aa possible. (39823) 

134822 


BRADFORD 

CITY OF BRADFORD 
METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 
BELLE VUE QUlLS SCHOOL 
A teacher of Biology Lp re- 
aiHred from Boptembor. <982. 

In this 13-18 girls Com pre- 
henalve Schuol. -A' level 
work could ba made available 
no .'? r Pr ln t,,B nonlr future to a 

5S , t‘e" b, 5ut WB !. 1 ^nVingneea nt |o CHELTENHAM 

teach the full ability range, 
with some Science for Tnn less 


fy r 


re ngn. 


P“Oll" le eneantial. An 
nbiilty to teach enathnr Sclen- 
-object or an Interest In 


Computers In Selenca Educa- 
tion or Land Ecology, would 
be an add ad advantage. 

The School la houaad tn 
madam buildings. In pleasant 
surrounding a and haa 6 wall 
equipped laboratories. 

Further details and applica- 
tion forma may be obtain nd 
front tha Dlractornto Persnn- 
nal Office, 4th Floor. Provin- 
cial Houaa, Markot Street. 

DraUford, 1IDI INF. Cam- 

P 'lotod forma should ho ro- 
urnad to the Hoadtaochor. 
Holla Vuo Glria School, Thorn 
Lana, DLiiqlny Rota, Brad- 

>3) 134822 

BRADFORD 

ClTYOr n R ADFOR D 
METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 
NAB WOOD GRAMMAR 

13>.18. CpmprahBnalva. 923 on 

t oll. 109 In Sixth Form, 
lag'll rod Tor Haptombor, 
l9H2, a graduate teacher of 
Phyalca. and integrated Srien- 
ca. Scale 1. Thla now School 
In modern buildings haa excel- 
lent recllitlaa ana aqulpmnnt 
far Sdenca teaching, wall 
supported by Tochnlciana. Tha 
Dopnrtmaut la Nurrtnld bused 
1 the poet Involves teaching 
all lavala. Candidates with 
intaraat In Computlna and/ 


Ing- 

.v; 


FS£ E G 8 IR a L n s AMMAR aCHOOL 

ClialtPnham. 

GLS2 3JD 

(Voluntary Aided selective) 
V»P5A l,rBt> . •com Keptenibor. 

|o*char of 
BIOLOGY (Scale 1 ) to share 
in tlto work up to 'A' level 
■ nd wllli no to help ir necea- 
■ery with junior chamEslry or 
phyalca. Good spaclallal 
Pltfi 4 * “wq | ? •* i " pea nn ■ 


phyalca. Good specie Hal 
ilfflcatfan caann- 

aiqries" ‘ '"»«»■■■ 

Please apply by letter tn 


tha Headmlatrnaa, 
curriculum vltan 
and adilresxea 
fnrnna. (49046) 


encloslnu 
and lllmnn 
•if two re- 
822 


an intaraat ... .... 

or leaching applied Science 
will ba welcomo. and wlllii 
none to rontrlbute to tli« 
trq curricular artlvltlaa or 
School la expectod. 

Application forma and 
further del ells 


CHESHIRE 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
u 

ytanlrv Lane. Elleamaro 
Port, South AVirroI 

Tols 031-393 3245 

. . A woll eetnbllahad 0 FE 
tl-18 arhuol of uvar 1400 
pu pile with u Sixth Farm 
or 115. Tha school, well 
equipped In all arena la 
situated on the outskirts 
or the town and ■« within 
aaay reach of North WaLna. 

Hoquirod rur Sentambar: 

Heals t CHEMISTRY 

Woll quallffad tu )nln r 
■uccoasf ul Sclance Depart 


pie led 


...ZtiS' 

a/Td8 lJ ?36! 


mviru avi7iiail8(B 

J?lS, r X r n "interest n C com ' 
bitted aclaiica could nlao be 
an advanlaga. 

JCafi'JFf (letalla rram the 


H2 


Fur l her details from the 

rormi"-ho5id b «RffiSSa 

tSw&r ■■ oo mv& 


BRADFORD 


#2 0 *&* p 1 w, * h ■ .Sclance 
for. .tha l.eea able. 'A' level 


work could ba made available 
at once for an experienced 
candidate, end to oth era -fol- 
lowing a aatlarqctory rirat 
yeara teach lag. The School 
Iibb a strong Sclenco tradition 
and the auccaxqrul candidate 
will have a full commitment 
ta teaching apd will be er- 

K icted to play a full part In 
a development or tna de- 
partment aa a step In their 
advancement In .the prorea- 


npt 

J K 


alon. Ability to teach another. 

nb Joe t would be an 
qualification. 

,.^l ur , c i!5 r dot “ ,,a jad epptica- 
i'on lot- ms may be obtained 
front the Directorate Pc r boh- 
°{J lce ' 4th Floor. Provtn- 

■r^dfped' BDI i NP. Com- 
pleted foraig .should be re- 
jurnets to the Headteacher, 
Belle Vue Glria achool. Thorn 
Lane. Blnnlay Rond. Bradford 

Is^B^i^SbafaW- TOsiS 


BRISTOL 

BT MARY REDCUFKE AND 
TEMPLE V. A. SCHOOL 
SgmeriBt Gquera, Brleiol ESI 


lulred 


for 




Englaiicl voluntary aided 
school drawing from whole of 
Avan: Teacher of Phyalca to 
A-lgval in wall established 
bai - 
lor 


September. 
Ig this 6 f.e. Church, of 


aperttnonr. Scale II available' 
»r suitabla 


qualified arid •■- 


perlenced candidate. 

Apply to Hand m aster 'Im- 
mediately encloalno jt.a.D. 
(44365) . . 134322 


BROMLEY 

to ROUGH QF 


CORNWALL 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
Thera la a removal axpanaes 
BcnomBa 

FQLTAIH SCHOOL 
Trovnrthlan goad. St Austell. 
Cornwall I*L25 4 BZ 
Group No: 1 ] 

Non on Roll: 1340 
Headteacher: J. L. Deacon 

PHYbfcJVsciBNCE Beale 1. 
Required for Septambar 7 982, 
taachor or Physlca/Sclonca lit 
thla aucceaaruj 11-16 school 
where traditional values are 

B rlzed. The post orrars an tn- 
iiialaatlc Sciential the chance 
to teach Phyalca throughout 
the achool In o new purpose 
built. very wall-equipped 
suit. An Inigraat In computar 
studies would be an added 
ndirantage. 

Ol os Ui o data for appllc-a- 
tlons win ba two weeks fol- 
lowing the appearance of this 
ndvarnseintnt. 

. p J? ama aPRiy. by latter' In- 
cluding curriculum vltaa and 
names and addresses of two 
roTareaB to the Hoadtaacher. 
from wham further detelle 
can be obtained by the Inclu- 
alon or e S.A.E. f 39 1 71 ) 

134992 


CORNWALL 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
There la e scheme Tor 

|t "Step f?e R"Fn 8 b'r a n n el 

SCHOOL 

Rectory Road, St Blephen. SI 
Auatair, Cornwall PL26 7RN 
□ roup 9 
No on Rolli 700 
Headtaediar: Mr, P.P. 
Salman . 


, Ired 
toglit 


Gy TEACHER SCALE I 
in September 1982. 
lo join Sclance De- 


:hool 


LONDON B( 

BROMLEY 
II AYES 3CII 

K ail Common Rand. Hayes.' 

■omlay. Kent. BR2 7 Dll 
(Six form entry ro-oducatioua 
1 1 -IB yeara) 


, SeptembBi*. 

!Ml K_Fb 




— ... ... . . aducationel 
. . . . years) 

Required rur 

don Area Allowance, It le 
honed ta recruit an able and 
onthusleatic teecltgr who 
would m lnt area tad in wprk- 
dleclnllnad and re- 
aiivlrunment. _T)ie 
largo sixth forjn 


partmant end teach Biol ug) 
JO. level. Human biology 
CdB, end lower aehoal bit 
OicnT science. 

> apply by le 
currloulunt \ 
md oddrsaxci 
. to the Hon 


, Pinnae apply . by 

rludlnp 

nomoa an 


floVa"* 


ddv to 

y to 
QlO- 

• tters In- 
Itae and 
>ea of two 

“"TOMfii 


ino in a 
aponalve 

aqho^Lh. 


CORNWALL 

^•^TO^Sf'S^Uornn 
iroun: la. 


obtained JrdnV Dt J. sTxi 
Ins to whom cornplat«d f< 
should ba rptur." “ ' 

SM B * ,T<tl 




on Rull: 7 400 
Sixth Farm ufi M 


AVON- 




team- 

eclanaa 

teclini* 


jomnino 

te.ch«n P 0 UrPO ttor t ' 
|SFa^#,«SS Tunior 
i^pllclnfaVho uld°ba^ ^ r, t p /to tt | P fia 

tp conlrlDUtB tn carporate Ufa 

of the.ao'tpoj' fQrm a, to 


BROMLEY 

LONnpN. POflOUGH OF 

Joopi. 

^ShlBlohurat, 

(ant BUT BPS . ' • 

.teqUlred (ur Bapletnuer 1892. 
Phyalca' gradueta to teaoh 
triroughouV thp aohuqr uu tb 
‘O' and .'A' level. _ . , 

Goopare la' a go-ediicatlon- 
" " _ ii»«hvh Bchools roll 
wills AA 

Head- 
posBible.; 

■ me* 


jopfiStf sGjrooL ■ 

iswrtir*' ■ 

Ired (or SaRtpi 

a«r«i 

nd -'A* laval. 

jpira la 1 ■ ««*■ 

ftoPBl.VBSHS'JWf'-- 

!”„V F M, 'tflT,. “fh.‘ 

“1® r.”r1.,*fe)T ‘m<4K 


130 

Haadtencher- Mr*. L, V. 

fcW^ica SCALE I 
Requlrud Tor Septambar 1BB2. 
An enthusiastic arnduato ta 
teach Nuffield ‘A* level Phy- 
atcB. 'O. inval ana C.S.E. 
Phyalca In an expanding de- 
partment. 

Grant emphaaia Is placet! u 
Curriculum developoinnt an. 
experimental approach to del 
«nca Tesohing. 


Si3 


The 

would 


. lutcuiful opn) leant 
of 14 Sci- 
ence stair <8 Phyairai working 
tdern wall-, equipped 


modern 


laboratories. An luiernat, in 
elactronfca an pdvantnqo- 

tetler in- 
vltaa 


Plea so apply by. 


eluding curriculum 

id addru^w ^ 


names and addru 
refer bib, to the 
<31)1821 ► 


and 

two' 


Tttffii 


*N' I ...I 


■ r . 






F 

'S’ T • • l K 1 
V ■ 

m 

(ri 

j; .;£Jc 


I 


fj 

Is 


■«a 





\ M i 

< > ! . i 


J i j !• • 


•• •' v j . •( 

i -i 4 j ; j 

iO.** • r* • 


»< 


tiii 



j*..' • *.. 

ifj . : . 

i'f ; [ ' ■ 

\k f* ' 
*'l 

■\ : 

.tf ■ 

n 


SEC SCIENCE 


CORNWALL 
EDlfC.A Ti€3N t:t»M*UTTUV. 
Tlloro Ii a rntmiv.il 
schema. 

I'OOL SCHOOL 

Churrli Hnnil. Pnol, ll'*ilruili. 

Cornu ul I Til I 5 3I'Z 

GrdUn- ID 

Nu (in Roil: *..7 6 

I lcadlrDi.li nr: Mr. J. A. 1.. 

Wells. 

PHYSICS /COM DINED 
bCIENCU SCALE I 
Required for Siiutrinbnr IHR 2 . 
prnfrr.iMv a iniicliiatn tri trnrl. 
thn Full non/nlilllTv rnniin ui* 
Hi 'll' ImnHO.S.f. Tills Is .i 
* lour Inlil nil Di'i'in tiua-lil In n 
til nlily romii-ili'il Si l.oul m 
West oormvuii. An <i 1 1 v v > i* 
(rni'll t'liiiiini l nr Si ml Ii-m in 
'll* Irviil mi AtlviiiLliHir hill mil 
iisairmiiii. | iirilii.r ili-l lalln will 
Ini sniit In short IlHlml ii|>l<ll- 
Litnia. 

l'lnnnn aimlv tiv Inllnr lii- 

■ I III I Inil lf>li*illli.lli' liIHUlii'r . 

Currli ilium vltm* mul iiuini'i 
anil aililt'i'indi nl two rr- 
fernns. tn ilic llmult nin li.n .it 
tlm irlmol. 139183) 134 8*4'.) 


CUMBRIA 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

nen went school 

Cnstlniiutn llrlvn. 

Ctirknrmni.il. 

(MIxkiI. 11-16 

Comprelianslvn. 720 on Ilulli 
llenhlrncl from Nnptnqilifir. 
I !i H'J . nxnnrli'iii'i'il Umrlu’r* 
■inwiy nun) lllnil firml.ilitni I nr 
ll»p lullciw 1 iiii imisih f •mi Inn 
nr MrlriiL-fi hiiU Mill lit iNi-tile 
II. Piiran Hue in ihihI hi vi iJ v I iiii 


tnaitiiiin iiL-riisi I fin lull iii|i> 
and ability rnniiK. TpihImt Iii- 
lornratnd hrlnirr mill lt.in.IS 
Environ man tal Sturllra (tf« rile 
1>. Thin In n temporary Toll' 
time post for one vr-nr while 
tha present tmirhnr la oil 
sBCUtUlmA.it- 

Application forma and 
further datnlla are obtainable 
from thn Hoad, narwenl 
School, Carkorniauth , to 
whom L'amplelod nppl IcbiIoi.r 
should be rnturned within 10 
days of this ndvcrtlsnmaiu . 
092301 134822 

DERBYSHIRE 

THE IIATTON SCHOOL 

Station Hoad. Hatton, 
nerliys. 

Roqiilrnd Tor Snptembar 
1983 a tcurlior nf chamls- 
try to 'A' lovof with soma 
Physics to nt leant 'CV 
■oval. 

This la a Stale 1 boat 
offering considerable scope 
to an enthusiastic and cap- 
able young teachor. wllllnn 
to moke a major contribu- 
tion to ftclenca teaching In 
this plsaaant rural compro- 
henalve til- IB) of only 
700 puplla. The depart- 
ment haa flva labs for u 
department of live rull 
ttmo stnfr and one part 
timer. 


Tim Hrlmol is sit. mind In 
iho llovn vnllry midway 
batweon l>erby nnn 
lltluaetnr. 


Appll.-ution liy Uataiieti 
letter lo thn Head ntan tar. 
to Ins. I iidii curriculum vitnn 
mil i.a.nne/iuldrnsBoa 
wu rofaroen. (■■HrllMii* 


ipaaranca of this adver 


Uorbyalilra , County 

Council la an oqual unnar* 
lunliy employer. (58 a ©pi 


DERBYSHIRE 

COUNTY CaUNaiL 

1970 on 

roll. 

T Graduate Assistant 

anchor or Physios (Benin 
I rna aired far Heptembor 
DBQ to Julit a IsrpSi sue* 
cess ful ae pan mint t. Pity- 
.arcs Is taught n« a .itepnrnia 
BRlencu to nil pupils for a 

K nars sna Is a popular op. 
Ion tlisi'asfter. 1 Tlisra Is a 
act of ftlKtli 'Form 
. JF»b. »°i* * suitably 
quallfiail person. 

Letters of application to 
ilia (leadnisitnr at tlia 
school. 

■ Oorltyshlrs . Counly 
Council Is .an sqttal oppor- 
tunity employer. 

DERBYSHIRE 

BOl/jCATION COMMITTEE 
' CHELL ASTON SCHOOL 

' C^S£?o*5^SrB^E7 . 

: 

share .In tns teaching of 
Biplogv. Iti this edinprehen- 
slva school of S40 pupils 
■ aged 1 i • l« years. The 
successful candidate will 
bs.axndctad to teach Com- 
r biped Salon oo In the. lower 
achook and the . ability to 
taagh some Physics or CHa- 
■ mlstry would also ba an 
advonteao. 


DEKUYH1L1UK 

Til K lilliXNVIl.l i: SI lUMM. 
Plll-tOII H> Mil, Wtliulvllll’. 
Hurl mi -mi - n-i'llt 

A m till* I tnirher •>! 
<ii.Ni.iiAi. m.'ii:nci: .iu.i 

ItlUI.noY Is i-r.iul ml 11 -Hill 

H«.|iti* nil >■■■'• I *ucii . 

rill- iicrtim m.iitiliitr.l 
Will l<llll .1 Hill ■'■•SHrill nil. I 
i’ll! IiuxIlii I lr 1 1*11111 t>> trill'll 
I lir.Jiiilhuiil I Iii. .Iiii' .iil'l 
ii hi 1 1 1 y r .nnn-. 

r.r.iuvlllr Is n w.'ll etrui - 
iiiri-il. ihIm'.I 11-16 (.niii- 

I i r rh mi ilvr wIili .« hioiiiIx 
iiiak'- nl *> I tii'ii i s . 

I urHii'i iiiirtlfulare .fiid 
■UMlIll .llll.ll liH'll'H .1% ■lllillll*' 

C If i HI Du - til-nil. 

■ iH-iiir. 

Ilrr livNhlrf Lniilllv 

Ciiiiih II Im iiii.iI ■iiiiinr- 

tullltt ••|II|IUIV»I'. I.VHIU'll 

IA4BJJ 

DEVON 

III ease sen dlsiiltiyi.d iirivrrtlm' 

muni un pnnr 33. l.M!HIOl 


DONCASTER 


AltMTHOU l»K 
c:oMi*imiii:N hi vi; 

SCHOOL 

Mere Lena, Armtliarpe. 

Ilimrituirr HNS 2I)A 

1 I -JO fill l ull Hil l ml Util I fin 
In tin- atli fitrm 

l(i'.|iilri:<l lur sciili'iiilim*, 
I'lK'J < • nil) im I ■■ f.Srsli* 1/4 
un <"'ill"<! In •-Jt|.i'l'|.'lli "l l« 
iihmImI with ilni tmti lilim uf 
I'tiynfis Hii-iiiiiiMniil the 
Krliiml tn 'A* li'vnl. 


ii mount of ncudnmlc 
taarltlnu. with two physirs 
gruups in ciacli year of the 
6th furm. 


Lattera of application. 
Including curriculum vltao 
and naming two refarcos. 
should ba addressed to the 
lleudinastur lit ttio school 
as soon an possible. Telc- 


83 1S837. 

134B22 


( f><inceni 
(39252) 


DONCASTER 


HAYI'lEl.n SCIENCE 

l.OMP HEIIliN MI VE Rnnulrod 

„ HCIIOCJL primarily 

Hurst Lane. Aui-klny, ( . r Uclino 

Doncaster Physical , 

_ , _ _ . „„ _ „ onto. in 

Tal: Doucastor 770589 possible 

„ . , _ , _ mint for 

I S»pt*em£u^°i 95 2 ) 

taai'her'or'idofug y P RT s vsRj VSPfiV 

able ae u result af a staff teache 

promotion. The scliao) , ACHt 

pflors td + . C8E and *A* Required 

level Bloloiiv roursM In Jh "he w 

yon/* lour, flva, lower and *" HBru , , 

upper Hlxth. CandldutoH Formin' 

Should bo . rnpuUli. uf nncAY l 

tenrliliip nurli • oiirans nut fn!,ii in! 

a ble tn toarb Com blued 
if luiicc In years nnn, two 
and tlirnn. An ublltly. tti t.u, Puni 

loach aonin Physics niid/nr Tra r-it p 

Phynlfnl Sclr mo rmild bn TEACIII'. 

urmlustt 

«cpi r,r ijf ssnr^'n BS 3 s» 

BOlith Doncaster njid the LATTON 

S arket town of Tiawtry. 
ha rsithmant Inclunaa 5. 

nwtry. cummuiNi- vllinaas. ffoutliorii 

auu HAP V 


ENFIELD 

I.IINIKIN IKIItOlhfll «»r 

AYi.wAiin si riinui. 

W II 1*11 1 V Wilt . I.iimliili NIH 

II in iiii •■■itrt Mltril 

I'liiiinri'lii'tislt r . I»*'H l.'dtj 
Itritiil ri'il Sen dll r. st II N- 

t.'l tn.irllfT <n.!ll' I • lift- H|" 
■If- 1' Si'tltllil .■’l.lllllll.ltl'HI 

■ iruiili*. wlib tin' ■iiHinrtmi It ' 
ul tl. "A' Il'Vfl tvi.lk 
Milln SHl.Uil lllolmit ttllll till' 
t» It.llll v nf I'lltsli'.ll S.ll-li; 

I 1*4. TiillMUM til V 

III t'liti'l i mil rr ill 1 1 li.iin- 
MlllSlllllll.il .llllltt .III' 11 III 

■1*lll It Ii .11 •» 1* ult' IHUI 

A l>|ilt l«v l<*lli-l‘. Imil'llli’l- 
ttllh Itvii li-lnri't In Iiii' HituI 

T.'il. lll'l- ill llir s, Iiii.iI ,is nu*" 

HM n.iHiililr. 14341 1*11 13 41122 

ESSEX 

liti; lilt A ms ft in sciioni. 
ill . .ii 1 1 fill. It - un 

suinki \v it ini hi . 

I'.*l: <1)37*1 h Ill'll *. 

Tl‘ A< 'III It 111 PHYSICS S. nl** 

K.T|illlT'il Si. 1. 1 1' III In’ I' . l*llV*l- 

■'iHi in tr tirli iilivsln unit mil" 
•ir.ilnl *<i li'lli'i' I lift ilitjlii Mil III*' 
Hi-hnul. An I urn iir.it ml "trlmi- 

1 1 h I wiiii |. l I 

Ani.ll.'.it Imii. tiv li'Urr wllli 
i.v., >«< tin* IlniiHeai-livr 

I I tiulnt m > t.n." ii|miisi*I. 
1*1111.1.11* MdllANT 
i-()MPHt'.iii:Nsivr. sent >1)1. 

< Hi ill 133H. | 1 - 1R nil. ."Ii 
llrniliriimU XVtiY. C.iilrlii'ntnr. 
Tel: Cult' llrstrr 43222/3/4- 
C.IIEMIHTRY .SPEC! AUNT 
Nt nlr I . 

lii'tlllllT'll «i«-|»l fllll»fl . In ti"itll 

Hu* ii in it >1 mtiini- 

11111 tn i.»ih*i Iitii i* mill iiiihI- 
II 1*', it lull s A l> 1 1 1 1 v in nl |rr 

I'liXiln/IlltriHTlIrd .St Iriii i> till 
iitiviiiii.i.it' Itr. i-iiilx miiill i u-il 
nriiilu.il *■ wi-lmnin. 

Apiilv wllli ■ -v. Imiii i-ill»f ■<- 
Iv ti> IfitiidniiiHtnr ifiiiilniiip 
s.a.n. tiltiuse). 

ONf» Alt COM Pit hi I P.NMl VU 
5CIIOUL 

I Roll 1200, 11 - IB mlxiidl 
Fyrield Hunil, Onnnr. CMS 

Tnl: Onqur 363232. 

SCIENCE Scale 1. 

Required Septcnibcr, Scientist 
to touch inulnly rnmblned sci- 
aiicc and food science In thn 
lower schuol. Must bn In- 
tcruntoU In tirw Unvolopinnnts 

III SL'luurn curriculum. 

Apply by tottai* to tha 

Ifeaduiaater. nlvlnn names of 
two refnrous. (Ponlsrap s.u.o. 
ulnnsot. 

WOODLANDS HCHOOL 

(Hull 14971 

Tnkely Etui, naalldon. 

Tat: llnslldon 2B2I46, 
HCICNCE TEAC1IEH MculO 1. 
Ranulrod Snptcinlinr 1082. 
primarily Involved with l.ow- 
irr Ut-hnol. tpathluti Genurnl. 
Physical and/or lilnlunlcul Scl- 
snra. Initially for I year, 
possible purmanant appoint- 
ment Tor sultabla candidate. 
BT. MART1N6 SCHOOL 
(Roll 10601 

Hunnlnu Hill Lana, lluttan, 

fc ! ,,t 09??‘ 1 227650. 

TEACHER OF DIOLOOY Bcnlo 

Required Bnplontbnr. to sharo 
In the work of a etrouo miir- 
cnsaful deparlmont In Slstll 
Form Invoi. 

OBCAT II A DHOW Hf.'MOOI. 
(Rull 1330) 

lhirrinld Hood. Ileuhlvn Lone, 
Chniiiiftriird. 


Chalineriird. „ 

•j- EA C1I Elt' ? >F r HC:i Ii' NO Ii Hr a In 

Clrnilunto t'Pqnlrnd to tour I 
llloloqy up lo "A ' level mul 
CTofiibineU Hr In nee in l.nxvfi 
Nulioat. Ollier InlerOBtr 
Nlmuhl bn stated. 


to touch 
Invoi mill 
in i.iiwit 
iMlnrOBtN 


— mane lr 
cuminulMi' vl 
' Pinnlittilay 


CTonibincil Nil mi cp In l.uwr 
Nulioat. Ollier Inturosti 
should bn stated. 

SCHOOL 

pirw, llurlow CM IB 


Pleasa apply liy latter, 
ancloslnu a curriculum 
vlino ami thn names t»r two 

H irer a os. direct to the 

sadritiuflar tA. Biarpy “4! 

SauSI"' ■MSIIft 


»ray DA) 

*1 3 £ 


5?fi..%W^E a A 0 gMra ,3 Hca.c 1. 

B squired Hoptnmbor to teach 
lolbqy tliruuphuut thn sriiuol 
(O 'A' lever. Hiinia lowor 
school Uoneiul Nrloni'p. 


school U on erul Hrlojii'B. 

Htroiia etitliuslnattc depart- 
mettl with well natablfsbad 


DONCASTER 

DON VALLEY III OH BC1 
"HVniurpe, Dunce star 

Do nip aster (Q3Q.il) 7# 

load 

JpBB 1 ”n'wn 1 1' qiiMliri'"*’ **“ 
nlBslli: . lour her 
(scale | | to leai'tl 

fiidlnq ‘A’ I 


For ilia qbova four posts 
uurrleuluiit vitna diui nemos nf 
two rafnraaa .to. HeatHaaoher 

BSSFlkdW*" i Mft 


Doucastor (03081 73135 
insatanA. J. Jiiub MA 
■nil Tor Hnntninbei 


GWENT 


pr 


ludinc *A r level 
18 ml xml, .Conn 
out with . nu 
?n 

sixth rnn..... . . 

madia (fly oy letter 

as~sn(i'lhn naitms” 1 ailtffss- 
i anti status of two re- 


MPnism 

mil rnn 

ihffin 


OUNCIL 

itNfllvii flciiom. 


1 st flepteiit 


TeX: 


f *raflR ,,, l ut tvvo * 

Further details of the. post 
and thp saitool are .avsliablo {Ml! 1 
from ths Heauinastar an re- Kvf.x 

iv&A rim:?- » 


tfrailunta t«> laaou ncruss tiia 
whole ran no and ability In- 
oludlnq. r A, r lavsl. 

. AnpilcDtlqn forms ■ and 
furthar. InTormstUui . where 
available, obioinabla from the 

RK?. ct «& 


Cwmbran. Owont, NP' 
. an rnuelpc of s.s.f 

£a.V2p .msi \% A i 


DORSET 


g aiLLlNOHAM SCHOOL 
Illmflham. porset . 
om prehenalvu i fljlo nilxed 
Required for Baptenibert An 
Assistant TaacTisr CBcSIa l)j 

S f Bcloiteo, oble to Join In 
□mblned Science ' Courses 
and offer personal specialise* 
you _ In Physics, .. both to 
C.B.E. levaj. -All sclpnce 
courses qrs Nuffield- baaed, in 
nxcsllcntly equipped labor- 
atories with good technician 


/ Dorbyshlro* .. \ County ' 

DONOA&TEH 


CDuraes are Nufriald-baeed, In 
excellently equipped labor- 
atories with goad technician 
support. . 

.Applications (no forms), 
i with names of three reforebs, 
to Htyadmaater 'em soon ^as. 

• .Nb. Apsiipstioni oft res- • 
< trjetad (O' College Leavers and 

«X;ST BupSEX:; ■■■' 


HAMPSHIRE 

port Hill school 

kenll worth Road. ... 

■ate 

Tolephona BssIngatakB.5431) . 
A' new, comprahonslva and 
aommunity school 11 - 16 

S Bsrs, with a six form entry 
ullt an the site of an Iron 

’ISoquIrai September. IS82 
Beale i Teaoher of Physics to 
O.C.B. 'O* level and C.B.E, 
together with Integra tad Sol- 
ones In the lower school. 

There are rive new end well 
equipped . Balance .Labor- 
atories. 

Please send letter of ap- 
plication and curriculum 
vitas, mentioning; two profes- 
sional r afar ess and S.S.e. for 


NIK 1TMKS KI'UCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 


IIAMl'KIUUE 

XYDUl.hl'ilN KflllXit 
I lli-*.li*r Hii.i.l . 

Ninilii.il ii l.V.i 11, illi! i'll) 

< I 1 f, ail si-ii < . ■ in i ■ 1 1- 1 1 it •» i s i- 
N<HI n'l'l i 

HiTiiilri'il lur •*«*>i»"ji»li*’i 
Ni ill*' 1 - I'i'iii In i uf t |i«- in | •- 
li'X In 'i )' li.v «- 1 \% illi lull- 

iiniii >1 Siti-iiti'. ,m .nil ini.uii 
A|i|il> liv l.'tli'i in ll*--»-1 
with i m i n tilmn « ii.ii- .iiifi 
■i. uni's ul in" I i In- .»i i.iii.iI it i 
f«'ri'i*i hv 4 HI Ii M.it . l'UI,'. 

f 3*132 S) I.X4II,!'.: 


11 A VEIUNIt 

I. ON III IN III IIH ll’lili HI 
l(*\ Vl'lll N(, 

miirsi i iti Hi i. si in ii ii 
L ullin' l >«iii'. < 1 * 1111 * 1 ' iiuw 
Ituilif in ii. I.wn 
I I'li-iiliiiii,. it. inn ,.i ■ l -in-M .! 
i Hull 1 3tlii l u I . 1 . i 
Arilim lli-iiilf ».n lu-i H . 1* XX 
l'llll-l . II. Nl . 

M II. Nt I.. s<:. XI | l I,, .,| 

Sr*iiti*iillli'r I 'Illi'.. un ml Im 
..l.iilli 11*111111*1' In lulu .1 lili.ii 
sin rrssltil I li'ii.ir I Hi i - ii I III 
si’ii'ii |iiiriuiir liulll IhIiiu ill" • 
li'S. I : « ii n ■ tviirk In l'll%ili*i hi 
( ' lirmlst !■> In 'A' li*\i*l lul " 
h 1 1 1 1 ill ■ I <• ■ ,i 1 1. 1 lit ii 1 1* . Ni nlr J 

■l v, || tat ill- |, lr .in |U* i' 1 1' ||. i"l 

■•(•lll/lTKIt 

1 . 1 * 111 * 1-11 ul .l|l|llll nl lull 

sllmitil In* ii-iil In Iiii' llrn<l- 
tcui'lier nlvlnn lull i iirriniiuni 
vlluf* ii nil f 11111111111 Inn ri*- 
f ouin. I'luiliiii ilnli 1 ' 14 rim n 
lifter Ilin o|i|ii*iii nui r u( this 
mlvrrllnomrnl. I3'I33H| 

1 3 i irj-.i 


II AVEilINd 

LONDON MOIIOtKill O* 
IIAVr.ltlNU 

I O ltr. NT LODtili Kl.'lltlOI. 

(Hull 1300 Cu. l.il.l 

I. oilnu Liiiiii, (.'nlllnr tiun, 
llnmroi'd. Emit. 

Telephour: Romfuril 46412 
Art Inn Hnadteiulier: It.P.W 
I’lpor, n.fic. 

SCIENCE, NCALE I rixiulrnd 
Scpicmbor, 1982. an rntliii- 
aianllc tenclior in lull) n liinin 
suciobhIuI Dope runout In 
seven purpose tiullt luliuritiur- 
los. Exam work In I'hysli.s nr 
Cliaiitlxtry to * A' li-vwl (or u 
suituble in ml Id ii lr . Mrulr 2 
iivaltablii fur un nxiHirlrncnil 
ii ppl Irani. 

Dll ft Y FALLS SCHOOL 
I llal I 660 Cii.F.d.l 
XVlitnlntve Lmio. Huriu lini i )i 
ItM I 1 3TI1. 

S23^fl >i>l> " ’ >l,,rl>><il,lri 11 
Ilnailli’Qi lier: A.W. (irunlliuiu. 

II, Nc. 

niOLOCV, HC ALE I rrunlrrd 
be lit amber 1 9R2. A irninrii 

n raduato to Juln n well iihluli- 
alicd Mdoiicn Dopiirtninill 
The BiicronNful iipplfrum will 
t rodi the rull ubillly rauilii 
Tram (st year (o ‘A’ level 
work In Ilia 6tli Form In wnll 
equlppud laborulurlus With 
good technician support. 

For all pasts lottor* ul up. 
plication should Hr sent tu 
the llnudtoachrr i nnci*rueil. 
nlvlng full currirulum vllar 
ond miritlnu «WO roforfinx. 
nlaslnu dale: 14 days nrtrr 

ikufsrmn n >s»as 


umiNHi.nw 

I IIM.I l HI II *■« 111 «t«| 
l,ii hlir.it.l. 1 1 ■ ■ ,i 1 1 1 1-11 
Ml.I.llrii'- I XX | -I *i |- 1 
I nl II I ll-lil II.’ I'. 

Ilr, t.l I ■ ,|. Il.-i Ml I, I I 
XXnMfll I I* 

Hrljiilir.l *■> l*l.'ili|i..| | " |l ;■ 

Will -inilll iiii I ■*.<« In- ■ ■ ■ | **,|. 

•-II, i -■.ii.' l i In ir.i, ii in, ^ . 
il> i iliul I1l**l**i|\ in. dull i,, 

'<•' Ir.i I "iii*l IiiIi-.ii nl. .1 N, | . 
• •I" ri III flu I I'ki. i >, h.,.,1 

1 . *11.11. *1 .1 N. Il.l.il Is „ WI-II 
l'N|.tl*l|ll|* .1 II I | I II. |, 1",, , 
It. Ill'll l nilipi I'll*- "..|\ ,• Illi III 
111 ■ .inn i.iii.|i . I .lull it, | i, i|| i 

N»-w l..»l***i .i|.*rli'n ,ii ■< ii iju 
1*1 .inn lit .j 1 1 mil* 

I uiiilon Mix w .ini r 14*111 


1*1 .inn lit i 

1 ftlllll* 1 " 
I* " 

■ IiiMiiii 
I *111.* 

I rlli-ii 
t lir Hr ul 
l.illi ul un 

•■m null ■ 

Uf f w »* I n 
I III- » I X'*il 


111 .lllllll. IIII.II, III 

I r.l. In* i II 1 1 1 nil ill-, 
inllf I. . 1 , I. ii, ., rt|.i | |. 
"iin."» -mi- I ml.li nii'i 
Ih''*' i -. n •• liiiiii 
«l" I X 4 II ,* .1 


MARINGEY ■J* 1 ; 




UOH SOROOL . 

i4tt ^?£? u<,h v 


Haqulredfor Seplember. 
MsthemaiToa. 


ev«c sao tn "alxth . fprnil. , L 


1IOUNSI.OW 

I III HIM N II mill N< lllllll. 
t i hi "Iiii *• 

t I If llnll llUilit. Hl'l'lll I U| ll 
Mlililli'11'1 I XV H HIM. 

Ini in Nnn 4.1 nr, 
lli'll.l l i'.n lirl Ml i M 
llni'li. II X. 

I il.iiii. II n, liuul wllli 1X7 In 

till* Nlllll I ul III 

Itriiuli i'll N,.|ii rulin' r 

1*111.!. n 1 m.->ll-| u| IHnlu.i) 

I N i ,i I v* I i Iiii. nl <|, nilriilli 

■innlllli -ii 1*1111 mill 

In. II lilll-l *'»|irrlri|«r iun r,*ni|. 

Uni. Ill** * iiimiIIi mil 

will lulu i, •••mu uf iinirii -inil 
iliuiil.l It ■ np nl. lr ul Ir.i. lilii'i 

hliiliuix 1 liiuinilii.il, tlir 

*.i Inn il . mi In mill I in linl 1 nu 
*.\* Invrl wuik Inlnrif In 

I (inil. in IIIiiIuiis n,nl flir nl.lllfx 
In In" Ii rtn-ili) mill f lirinf... 
Id 111 ibr 1.IIWPI lllllll wilt 

lir uitilfUiinnf i| u.i f f r (• nflmli. 
riii'ii- nrr -linn. i 1 1 minium 
f trill will k mid rill l)ii*i*ii 1 1 < 

.7 ill) 1 1 ii nml Nrniur lUnliiiiv 
I lulu T In* r nrr 6 writ 
I'tiulppril leliiiritiurlri mid u 
hi 1.1 n r dnniiHtitr.il Inn rnniu . 
Tlinrr Ii llrii rulr Im liuli ul 

llSfllllllltl •* 

llrriilloril Nrlninl lur CilrlS 
ii it Sistli* I urni nntrv tuni' 
liri'liritnli i' Si liuul iliiimi'U in 
it iiiil«*l nrr.t In tlrmilliiril mill 
wllli iliiitd m * rhi in Ciuilrul 

t.iililliill. 

■ .mill, in Al lu w. un ii X4*tH. 
ii.n. 

1*1 un I im d.ili- 2 llili MiiY 

1*182. 

|.Hlti*r, ul nitplii nitnii uiv. 
Inil ilrinlli nl > iiiti iilinii vil-U' 
unit un fur i mill nililrrhim ul 2 
l'r I rriii'l Nliuuld In- * 1*111 lu , It" 

1 Irit d I'rmlirr. 13 3 0 421 134H2 2 

1IUM1IKUM1HE 
Kilt ■< 'ATKIN I (IMMI I I I. 
iirlni*ii> liiviiiitn 
ClILl.MHt OH11 Nl ')|l 11)1, 
Cflrlinifuril A vkiiiii*. (irliniliy. 
Itrinilrnil fur N«*pti*iiilir>r. 
I»H2 SCIENCE TKACIIKH, 
pref i-rnhl v able In ullrr l*ll\* 
(ilCS IIP In •«' Irvrl. wllli 
uiiixlblllly uf furl hnr uriiinu- 
llon prospniT*. S I*. A. itllu* 
wxnre puvnblt* 

Auplli ailim Inri'ii nml 
furl Her I n r ,i«* nia I ln« nlil ulli- 

aliln from Ilin llnnd (rnilirr nl 
the nrhunl Hi wimm • ilimilrlril 
furuiS Mimilil hr id nr nril 
w lllilii lO dnv* id Ihin ndvrr- 
llnnmeitl. 131143 m I.X4II42 


LANCASHIRE ^ 

be lit Hit* ,iR AMMAH 

*- ■faS'.sa -a; 1 ' 

■I Shu. T ftfflJMjlis (or^l 
*'i' Jill rmit. IV •"Pertssui 
t<'t**i'l'h*e'. Fur Ilia r a, „. ,oon h 

LHICE8TERBHIRE 

7 “ 5 «-‘S 3 SKSIl!,'S* 

Mull 1171 

1‘IIYSICS 

Hcalc | 

. Hrqiilrvil Auauti .. 
hikr tr.h.E. and 'O' Jfl S 
<*H vales, fllith ForD w 
!V. rl . “"I 1 (Isnersl Siudia 
A level wurk aiio -v.u 
■ililr (or sultobla cBndldttt! 

ii J l, . ,,h » r a , r,Bl . l « from Un 
""'I Apply Immmuui, 
liiii funnsi with full pj£ 
ili-uluiH nnil namei Md 
‘iilili risen n( iwo rtltrn, 
I S.A.1..). 139033° iTO 

LEICESTERSHIRE 

lltfSIll.nR HIGH SCHOOL 
/Hdllfin Kuad, XVI BI ton 
Mniina, Lelceittr 
In the l.a Ic eat ar*h Ire elan 
fur Ihn nrnanliatlop or 

aerondary educailon 

WlA* 

SCIENCE 
Scala I 

fleqiilrad Aupuil, wtll 
nuullUed and IniBglatitn 
l>‘urlinr lo Jain in *,qer|. 
"need team. An Inlsreu la 
u id i nnd jub/erl vtould ba 
iiii uilvnttlana. 

Fnrlhur iteialln from 1 h« 
Mead- Apply Immcdludr 
fun format wllli lull lir- 
th uliirn and namei and 
ndilrrmra nf two ralartM 
I*., ■<■".). <38376) D4»M 

LEICESTERSHIRE 

M UN DELLA SCHOOL 
XVyi-nmbo Road. LilcaiUr 

"TBBtflf* 

rasra 

Urni ulri'd Aupni. 

inui ln*r nf Fhyalta to lojs • 
new iiirmod laaicl •inthusUjt* 
Hi Innm iif tourliora in h. 


iS ftWWi!. ’""JJavi •« r **'*' 7 'i : iviHi a IKK e"'-? 

llannteiil ■ I3H43M I.X4II42 Idli mil will bx Sbprcind lo 


HEREFORD & 
WORCESTER 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

rn ;^r^w. UN,TV 

.. Niw Htront, Hulu-ry, 

Hndnul, Ul^^tlnnhnm H43 

. Duo tu iliivnluiiniriil 111 
(Ills linwly eat oil 1 1 all nil pur- 
puao Lull! 12 — IH rout* 
muiilty srlmul, that fidhtw* 
inu Post will beniime. avail- 
utile fn Haptnmbnr. lUB'di- 

A teacher nf SCIFNfT: 
with din mlstry ns s uiulii 
■Ulijent (Ncsln I). 

The succassfiil cnmllilnin 
Wilt, tn (tin tlrat lustniiie. 
be anrumlml lu Ihn «tslt Ql 
the Ubnvn srhmil. 

.For further . ilntnlU 

8 lease wrlln lu Ilin .wif: 
hit. (38483) 134892 


1IUMUKKH1DK 

BwittBir *■ 

mk\v- 


HANOI', lllllll 


enarilmiit. li.sr. 

fur Nr III "III IT I , 

l Ifni lir r ul 


llllpnwell llurnl. llnll. 

Mead: N, lleiiariliun. II. si . 
Henuli'eil fur heninnihei. 
1(1X3, n lenilirr ul 
MA rill MATII N mid sfll N- 
i;i: Niqlr I III | mil' Ii ptiplln III 
luxv nullity. All lutein, In 
piislurul w«»rk wiinlil he mi 
nfiviititdlp*. Ilmitull lint enneil- 

‘Jilita .S - 1 3 * IH i ll-eilu* il; 
( Itaill, I niril|irehol*«Jve m In ini 
fin iipiiriislinulelv rllll puplti. 

Applh l< It nil f iiniii nvrtllitlilr 
(rum iltf* Head, ilitnihl lie re* 
liirued liy 4»h lime. I *1119. 
(3U loot I34H22 


iiirfinim uieiv run piiiun 
»lli a I inn fiii'im nvrtllitlilr 
ilte llnsd, ilnnihl l»f re- 
J )iy 4»h .1 miih.. J!»89.: 


KENT 

l.'DUNl V CflUNCII. 
r.nilCATIUN lll l'AUrMliNi 
MAtllMTONi: I >1 VISION . 
HWAULl.AN IN NrlHIIII. 
I.puhaui. MuliUimie 
Mixed lllult Hi hiuii (Hull nun: 


xpn i ii llae In physMs «1 «1 

r:fci. CT va'g 

nun imnh-s SI "xuimlMiwa 
level watuld b® SS 
I min. Scale 2 
-iilifti'ly quolli ed xiil •** 
ui'rlaiii'iul siipllcani. 

I’urtli'T tie islls JCflJjj* 
LKICEHTEHSHIRE 
lu Min LBlcaatsnihh*^J n 

"rarwr 


klBRTFORDSIURlfi 


M te ,P a" d te.K r er f»F 


I nlilmilj, Mitid*>|liite 

Mixed lllult Mlltiifd (Hull HHIII 

in rural anil mu. 

Ilefflitrnil Hnplnuilier. UIM9i 
lUl TPMI'ltei' Uf ItUSl Ntlelilf*/ 

1,1 Vhi^niM hair uf I'liyelisl f*a:|* 
eitre nml (.'linulalrv (nruiillh* 
out the xt'hiuil. 

Apply til ilnad Test her with 
us inn s a nil add ir*»*< nf il rj* ■ 
(ernes. 1 31138 1|) I34H22 


KENT 


raff's'' 

•A' lavs I, 

I urtlmr drlwM’JS Maia li 

ii!r^*a:&"Ed7ii 


i Mr’fnrrwsiwM" ^ 

LIVERPOOL 

SBMiffir. 


first two years. The il apart- 
ment enjoys excellent labora- 
tory ace om mo do lion and tech* 
niqsl auppporl. . 


... auppporl. 

Tha successful candidate 
will be olven the opportunity 
to tsach across the full tan 
and ability range. _ 

An. interest In Computing 
would be an added recom- 
mendation. .... 

..Apply I m mad lately to, the 
Headmaster by letter* giving 
rull - curriculum vitae enu 
qujotlhg two referees. (Jg4gg^ 


ease send . letter of M- 
tlon and ourrleUIum 
i. mentioning, two protas- 


olrat * alrort^ department* 


Ked P 4ea^ejn?M. Smith, 

ah bo i M, *" d Com d rehen ■! v e 
w|th lafr lathe 

S(?ALa°f n s(i3IHNCE Toxohor ■ 
required for jn# year from 
September. I gSB. to rablnce a 
member .or Starr • on ■ Stiepnd- 
ment. The post # would, suit 4 X 
rsMPtly auajlflsu Beianffse 
whd Js able to- teach into- 

T4*«VW!s r 

* tea BWLHssIh 


HERTFORDSHIRE 

‘COUNTY COUNCIL 
East Herts 'Division • 
TKgjoHN WARNER 

it«n«toad Road; Hoddeadon 

aFi ability H.- IB co-^, 
oat|datlonal, ADPt'ox 920 on 


rirai two yrsi-s. ThMrunnr. 
some . pupils irnimfcr by 
Quldnd parental rhuii-n lo up* 
per Hchnols. 

. Required . for . Heiitemtinr 


.-^rtratory technicians. . 
Tlesse apply to thn. Ilcsd 

a°r-r r (3fl r ff8,° n 


P YSVJ8S 


KIRKLEES 

r^&n. 8 8^sbury WF19 

?iJ^H P ^t YH,CAL sc;,ENCE . 


Kin Hi assist yj.iSuflhont 

jiv,” 

!MB.ii 51 ! ^ 

NEWCASTLE WONT f . 

Instance. ■. “chow/d^ "Sr 
leschnr w-ihemiL 1 **?,, , pod 

Uble ffog •M.cW , W*' 


For.?u 

Jprsre 


urthsr details see under 

8cl * ,nCB *i3% n Js 


mi mm 


mmm 

feW'.Hig'wSf 


Haedmaa 

address. 


, uu made to the, 

'.•a w*mitu 


in approved cue 3s. -T l." 

.ddraupt' 

. ••• n- -i-i/ -Kyj 


SaEwawS • 'Jwtewic'' .fei*isr. dw \ 


m®- 


d lately to 

’Jnoliu/trtn 


KIRKLEES 

OY, The siirceasful applTcent 
will he required to tcucli lllol- 
oay to. *0 level and nn nblHty 
W assist With the teach Inn of 
ffelcnce tfirouuhout the school 
would.be an lldvqnldga. 

. ADpIkitlonJiy Idler to 
Ilesumniter OJvlnu full eM £._Z 
ctflum vlten end the n»me» 

Df '"SUM 


isBsgsg?.'- 


m: 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT Zl.5.82 


BBC SCIENCE 

c cBlInued 

NOREOkK 

BSP"**®"" 

fSKSo Msaier/Mleiress to 
St, !5 Muffleld Advnlir'iuJ Liivnl 
55Smiairysrid In tanrated su- 

ifl.c.I.e.r.) In the main 

lC p°ra/« rente will In* Olven tn 
.Lnifldste nlilu tu inukit ti 
nlfieant mi tin* 

field and U) lokn nu 
f( !iriantlsl re4|«*imM»IIDlfi in 
^tf d !tcom^ludtt^ll , l , iir.ivl.lml 
K . siiiBio person in i< rn. 
'“ r , “,iona| bnai'tllml linuso. 

8. nti* I Plus hii 
. ..ament plus rex I ill! lire. 

lnt ;jM?utfoii» wtlU , , Ml'* 

«.a n f rsfi-ri'iia iliuiilil In* 
SSffooisdlslolV l*i U»r «li**Kl- 
‘•f.. « r wymuiullimii Cull miii. 

K ^'^ndliarn Nnrtnlk. Nil id 
(no forma In Ihn Ill'll 
.^c"el.l38395. 13UUI2 

NORFOLK 


EATON CITY OF 
NORWICH SCHOOL 
Eaton Road, Nnrwlrh 

No. on Roll: I 135 

Sruln I 

Alilatcnt Pliyxli s Tear her 

Required fur BepifimlU’r. 
1982. The abilliy tu fimi'li 
■nne Chemlairv xvouUI Im 
( n idvsniaqn. Plivili.i In 
liught to 'A'lnvul. lu llui 
niln actiuol It rurnih uurl 
aflhS'O’ levn| uiifl C.S . E. 
Pbfiliol Sclonrn (Juurana 
and Iho C.S.E. (ifnllTtil 
SciencB Couran. 

Appllrallon rarma (rum 
ind returned tn thn Hnad- 
maaiar at llie hrhoul. 
(33006) 134822 


NORTH YORKSHIRE 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
ARCHBISHOP HOLOATE'S 
ORAMMAR SCHOOL 
Hull Read, York YOI SMA 
Required far Snainmlmr IQH2. 
IMftiir for ENCilNEEniNO 
■CIENCE 8 PHYSICS lur 
temporary onu (nrm <ipi»ilnt- 
dcqI lo covnr fur inrmbirr ul 
mff on eerondmmii. Work nu 
10 'A' levol lor ii lullulilf* 
rudldate. Scale* I punt . 

Application! tiv liitlnr tu 
lbs Hnadmailnr iiiirlualnu i nr- 
rlculum vllan nnrt tlm itninn* 
and addroeeni ol iwu re- 
feU8i. 1384631 I34B22 

NORTH YORKSHIRE 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
ARCHBISHOP HOLOATE'S 
GRAMMAR SCHOOL 
be advortlarinimt undei* 
Unhemolira Si ilia* |. I3B46II 
134822 


NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

Required In Nniiliiinliur n 
tSv dl { tu ilR. n “ l Upper 

aSnM«| roll) 1I>| III 

Iflgk Bl rup "l siirraiiuiit- 
i-^' r P_ I-', hi', rinirxiia 


SEPTON 

"fSiSS-'f Xii'™* 1 "OHOUOH 

S3SSF n ^Mi™ > 

S-'iS 1 *!* -s,™ <?ifiSS" p ' 

v,s.rss>iK' h * r “"‘ 

llHaLorx*^ OF 

lur Hnptciniior 1 Q 82 r for U *n22 

°l, Bill LOO Y fScilo 11 S' 

for' ! 'in„ f ° n r B( .^Pt"mb B r ’ibm 

tu^llar^flS-uuK « f r °e rm . B vs„ 0 in2 
"r'umVrSS, thB 
.Vaaii"' '® Ba 

134832 

SHROPSHIRE 

SVA^a T iE-Bse“ ,m « 

5ua 

Hiitiuirnil in this mixed enm 
yr £ j,nna,v. school** d C |?SJ? 

Apply by latter to Head. 

mat, ~'fna£ 


SOLIHULL 

In >u K‘ l Lniifi, Klnqnliurat, 

” 37 6NU 

;.,\Ui! fi v,,,,r ** 1200 on r °»* 

?P,ER 

,, -r>miV,y , n a nd IU a%\ C | 1 O ? f 0 Sp?S: 

,„i* , ' , l« r ® of application, with 
[Im namnB of two rerareM 
I.hn?. , iH nr *.i' ,lh cur rlelum vitas! 
I’hould be sent to the Hoadl 
inastor tin Boon i paisihin 
. wl.om further dstsfU 
ina% bi* ubtalned. Plenee «■*• 

i‘lm*e a.M.r. (43420) 134828 

STAFFORDSHIRE 

COUNT Y COUNCIL 
SCHOOL A, LEYNES Hl °H 
HOU W**««««gr ST14 


Hull: 1230. 175 In sixth farm. 

^ r.l! 1 . * n September 1889. 
I'IACHEH OF PHYSIC^ 


I Ni ulii li. Sixth Form teaching 
lv uvallaliin Tor a suitably 
fliinllflud person. y 

Auplli atlon by letter Im- 
"indlainly to the Headmaster 

nt the xchoul. 

All unPMiniila ore asked to 
nut ii tlwii it I* the County 
I./iiiiii ll's view that II Is de- 
sirable fnr ihi'lr employnsa tu 

Trinlr Unlun ."ijftiinyiwi 


.STAFFORDSHIRE 

Thn U|»". Will tomon-tho-H 111, 
ni iik i nril. 

M fecn'nr, b«BK(B: 

III Y (futili- 1 1 iu join e larno 
imil sin ri'isful ileimrimnnt. 

, AppMi ntlnri lurms obtain- 
Mbln iruni unit returnable to 
ilin Mniidtem linr (a.H.ii.) 

All nnpili untn are askoU id 
null* dial li is the County 
(mini 1 1 *« view Hint II Is ils- 
sli-nbln lur lln-lr ninplnyena to 


■*».. ' “f thn Depart. "H nppiirnma nro askatl id 

!!■? ’ i“ DUt * mnilnin fiirin- nuto Mint ii is thn County 

*«' Vter'ilKpftyi'.. 11 ?; 
lKS"i. faCTa'. r .:."l.‘i&oTf , 7KiM5 

,'^BIIIty to lm| n wllli I'liv- 

iPBre Q rl 0 tnd Ol,,HV l»f 

’ , HTAFFORD8HIRE 

'no^ormiv l }>i' MfuulnioiUfir l:l II (CATION COMMITTEE 
r SrirtiCr will lift II Afll.KY I* A IIK 

I3»*6 li U l * bn Please | . COMFItKIICNhlVE Kf'MOOL 

— — 134H«ju jiui'iiihlll Lime' Hiiiiolny. 

wNi.n 2ii/. 

nortkamptonhuuo: SF'SklSr 


OUlLSnnimiHjii c; ,,„ N ,. v 

North nmniui, NNo mji* 

igi^^ort rur Hiuitnntlinr. 
ifcals 1 1. Jlu-i* ‘viv**!; N 
within iLaHriJ" la. tnuglii 

unit si?d H l ?,'.'r n •>««•«■ 

»>?■! it..uTd i.V'tfil 


( Hi.uln |). 

Anplli nt Inn 


funils illlUi III - 


fflgf ‘TOraaW; 

felS2 ,,,ul " Rnt^wW Im 

toon, nB •noMmr very 
H &Blu|i3d OU J?£ 1" a wnll 

a- ap r SH a *“ss 

'«v)hB5 nip n n o' , ‘ii-w««L a r 

jifmil' n» -nJ?® school (nu 
*°° n ° a PQ^bUu 

^ahttonshwe 


Mile ri'tiui nml i'i*liirnnb|e lo 
Illi* lleiitllem Inn* (fi.rt.a.). 

All ninilli nnti urn nskml to 
mile (lint II lx thn r.ouniy 
Coiilli-ll'n view Unit It lx ue- 
xlrnble |ur Inelr nmplpyees to 
lie iniuittMTii nf sit SPliruPrlntj* 
Trillin 1 1ilinii . (3114 8 f ! 134822 


HTAFFORDHIIIRE 

htntiun Tlnnil. Chondln. Htuke- 

(Wrwup'Jl N.O.R"' 1.180 Ags 
jiKiinu ii-iaydsrai , . _ 


WSfiS* TaaSSS™ 1 *?!.' 9 89 ■ 
f ° r on " 

. aVallshbs *v “hODDa- 

'■ — * • laawan 


SSSPSHlRfc 

; Wivs'K 

fi *‘ l a6l,art< 


*<»' the. 

« J ox Inu curt- in- 


(.TIliMIHTMY ninl/ar DiOLO- 
CiY to exoinlnutlnn lovol, 
tunatlinr with Junior Science. 

lurtfinr^pnrVh'ii lanT' oKalnsblo 
Irom tlin llniultnnoher (i.j-j.) 
in wiiuni complotod for/ns 
xliiiulil he returned by 4th 
J nun. 1982. . 

All upplfcnnts are asked to 
iiuie Mint It Is the County 
Councl'n view that It Is dssfr- 
ubln for tlinlr omployaoa to bn 

Mi'aioy. iMmTHHIhh 

SURREY 

Comherlay 

{i||^ nd TSl: ,aV ^.r«ui8 

NT. ANDREWS R.C. (AIDED) 
HCHOOL , 

Leetheriioad 

(12 - IS NOR 60)1 a . 
CHEMISTRY teacher 8 cal a 1 
required Soptamber <989 to 

I oln very aurcessful, expand- 
ng (jrlencB Dept- .... - 

uaffi* to ****** T ® ,! ABh * OBd 

NT ANDItCWN C/E 

HECONDAHY 

cnbliarn 

}*1 IY S { C ^ M A Til K M A TICS 

■ aacliiir Stale 1 (RdMlred 
hepteinbiT «« teach up Id CBB 
mul I) level. ' 

25) l if P,y *'* T<< ! Cobhnm 

WABaffrTSSJi. 

J(\?»{.tlftV n, an." , |flTIICRATBp 

ste'iijrasu^*-! 

It V Inr roman ilo»el«|illiNJt 

from uriiniinnr to 4 rWHSTS 

ibenaiue aamnul 
Apply iu Hewd- »saX 
139614) I34H84 


SUFFOLK 
icgSfSf LAND high 
[,"«™ pVshSSKi*S . 

.v. F s:a: H 'Hr 

turned ■ t 3£& 7 li U|J 'j$ A ff - 

tame side 

*0K®5 0 0 P P°^? S1DE 

■StBSHfflSfimw. 
B5sfcu!s. o «u JSe”™' 

WAKEFIELD 

?1T Y O F W A K E FI E L D 
CoSnCIL° L1TAN DISTRICT 

SCHOOL RD K,OH «>•-*•» 

N.O?a. C f £ft r ° h0r, " ,V * - 

?Wa lr s ar»iS r I fantomber. 
BIOLOOY® 1 teacher oj 

. tD r n> avail- 
, reca[p t of a stamped 
"ed envolope. from lha 
Education Officer, 
Education Department. A 
Bygst, Wekeflald. to be 

tSi. AS?. w v th vL . 14 dB >* °f 

‘i 1 ® rtB,B Of thla advortlBa- 
man I. 

Hnniil 6 . 1 ?' applicants recolve 
M?- If -SliSPi 'w ,,h, . n 6 weeks of 
tns specified closing dote. 

ihsv ‘ha IP "J? Plssso assume 
" een unauceasaful. 
in the Interest! of economy 
'ndlv Idun l | « tt e r a will noi ™a 
sent, (356091 134822 

WARWICKSHIRE 

TRINITY SCHOOL 
Guy's Cliff* i Avenue. 
Leamington 8pa. CV32 
ANB 

R.C, voluntary aided 
mixed cornprehcnslve 
1,100 on roll 

Oroanlaed aa two 4 r.e. 
parallel holla for 12 - 16 , 
plus s mainly academic 
sixth farm hall of 243. 


19 sr-"-> 


September, 


. . T/oinod good honours 
lilolaglst or biochemist to 
teach Bio ony throuohout 
the school In exceptional 

lha vary well 


ancillary rooms (small 
an I mala, ate.) Investigative 
methods. Excellent oppor- 
tunity for talented prob- 
ationer. Seale i available 
for suitably experienced 
applicant. 

2. Talented and creative 
trained oooa honours 
chemist probably with re- 
search experience, to teach 
all levels and to be re- 
sponsible for sixth form 
chemistry In exceptional 
and vary supportive de- 
partment, Nine vary wall 
equipped laboratories plus 
ancillary rooms. Investiga- 
tive methods- Beale 2 or 3 
nvallablo for suitable 
(young) candidate. 

Applications by letter to 
the Principal at the school 
with curriculum vitae and 
two rnforaos (telephone 
nuiubors whore possible) 
(BAB ploasa), 138205^^ 

WEBT SUSSEX 

$ M&W&VhVpOL 

Ashdown Drive. Tllgate, 
Crawley. Biisbok. 

Heals 1. . • , 

N!®r“f(siTS i 

i^hSKRof' bbi 

ami Mode 3. C8B Bclence 
coursoa for all students well 
established, . taoethar with 
separate Solanos 'A' I avals. 
CBE and pre-vocotlonel 
nroups..Bxcal|opt rocllltles In- 
eluding own Isb. 


WILTSHIRE 

HBADMASTBRlMr. J. A. ■ 
D r Arcy 
SCIENCE 

required 

the C mpternlty leave of i JJJin- 
ber of staff. Although *■ 

L?oTn»,ira'raw« 
igrwsflarai. «■£ 

Further data 
OH receipt 

E^sburv th School 

wm H " ,m “ burv 

WILTSHIRE 

P v E lY{^U. C “°oS,preh-n.lYal ; 


tajwsvj. W ' 


ip Years i ■ subsidiary 

^ A W B h^Vwr2i. or TSi 0 « L c°g^ 

w«!K % “Sttrnotlve nisrket 




WOLVERHAMPTON 

■DfiawflrsufBfiHrH. 

VALLEY PARK SCHOOL 

ia*a q fc ,red ror Soprembor, 
=nuse or continued 
* hl " Inner- 
school— * ' 1 9 oomprehenslvo 

^Pui mtlpn forma ond 
LvnL , r det alla ere avail. 
Prt.?r/S5L m Director of 
Bgucgtlo n. Education Da- 

PWr 1, fiqus r*?, entr vtal ■ 
wh r 5 2, m Pi Dn * w vi i rbT to 
tgfn?d w^mn h °l M ci fl dS?. "Sf 
pNsaa“ <IW * p l“* rn * ,,t . ,S '' E 

»„?Jl? llvarha,,,plon !■ an 

a ?“JJ opportunity em- 

o pen 8 P t <f ” bo of C * 8*0 x*e s , Vll 

SBR3 p a eople r . e ?39l&oi tfl - 

134822 


Social Studios 
Scale 1 Posts 


BEXLEY 

LONDON DOROUOH OF 

hlackfen school por 

required for September, o 
graduate teacher of Sociology, 
“ CBl £, 7 ■ Sociology in offnrad 
J® 9,, and 'A* level and Com- 
munity Studies to C.B.E. 
TMporary appointment lit the 
nrat Inatance to cover 
maternity leave. Ability to 
o/fer another subject a dis- 
tinctive odvantane. 

„ Application by letter to the 
Headmistress with full c.v. 
Telephone enaulrlae wel- 
comed. L.A.A. £498. (3B4D^> 

KIRKLEES 


Speech and Drama 
Haads of Dapartmont 


KIRKLEES 

«^°^ n qS°„‘{SP ! il 

SCHOOL 

sci‘i l £ a ? '. op 3 J Ai.gi.at 1982. 

lNGt|sU t ?or hB ^,^ 

a*p SSSiSSl! nn V vm Schoo] 

r V «ESr ,C ^i??, cu i # f S l Pma 11 « ? n o d 

g{ a M a > "EM. *h. HendVestaP 
pLffi form. 1 SR„3ft 0, l. co 1 S: 

(Sasagi” BOOn a> 


LEICESTERSHIRE 

KINO EDWAIln vil 
COMM U N IT Y COLLEGE 
Warren HII la Road, 
Coalville. Leicester 
. Tel: Coalville 34925 
In the Lelceeterahlra plan 
for tho organisation of 
second ery education. 

Upper 14- 1 8 
Roll 1150 

EXPREfiNIVE ARTS 
Scale I 

.p | ^ 2 Si 5 od .c A .Ve uu V W&X 
prea, ,f ^dJcS: 

hence, drama and 
{?“■*£; AppMcnnta should 
be able to offer denoe/dre. 
me skiue but BhoSld ktufp 
3 * 8 at contributions th«y 
could moka to PbviilcnJ 
wlihuf^h “nd/or music 
within the contest of ox- 

prBss vn *rta. *r h * pDBt l( 

OTI » f°*r with a 
*? ° r hacomlng 

permanent and offara 

opnoruinltlea to be Ip. 

In curriculum dn- 
velopmont and should 

. t -° **«®rnotie and on* 
thualnatlc new nntranta to 
tha profession. 

. Fiiftl'br detail a nvallnble 
from tho Principal. Apply 
(no forma, with full par- 


te?,. 


wF*4 n B?z ROBd ' Mirnliia 

English ft Social Studies 
Teacher Scale 1. 

For further do tells see 

y n (3 r B f&r d,,ry 

LEICESTERSHIRE 


MUN1TY COLLEGE 
arran Hills Road. 
Coalville. Leicester. 

■ n the Leicestershire plan 
for the orgnniaetlon of 
aecondery education. 

Upper 1 4- IS 
Roll 1160 

SOCIAL STUD IEB 
Required August 16B2, 

STlitSd “SlTchef TB - » 

&L,„. _..™' MOU10 

have a broxd commitment 
to the teaching of aocio- 
POU'Hcal skMie aerpaa tha 
full ability rage end en ac- 
tive interest In curriculum 
deveiopraont and commun- 
*iy aduoallon. He/aha 
■ hotild bo able Initially tp 
taaah at laaat 2 of ths fnl- 
ipwlngi History, Social and 
Community Studies, econo* 
mica, politics. 

Further detalla available 
from, tha Principal. Apply 
(no forms) with Tull par- 
ticulars end naming 2 ra- 
feraas, (38042) 135022 


NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE 


D?Sa' r ro d r „ ' rom .Soptamber 
■ Vex. for ana year In tho first 
1 9® *• -2-8 ulto bl y qualified 
teacher of Drama and English 

nn». ,l ffih r !! , V 11 ,u “ Scifle 1 
J'Jlib County Co-oduca- 
• Com prehr naive School . 

?eeentla?" but not 

Application forms “ are 
obtolnitals from and rat urn- 
able, to the Heed Teacher 
Heaton School. u. a U 


obr o ^.blV ,0 r n rom unU 1 *return- 

*° K A ha . tSKSk: 


Technical Studies 
Heads of Department 

CUMBRIA 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
fto-Advortlxoment 

School 3 A ** ORAMMA 8 

8Smb?Ar a,> Mt,l "*' or * B - 
Alfe Joo*o\f^Sff) Va,unt * ry 

Experienced Head of Craft 
pepartatent required for 
Saptembar, 1982 Scala 5; 
Couriesar-B geared towards 
J.M.B. O' ana 'A' Laval Da- 
■Ian* The person appointed 
will teach mainly wobdwark 
with aom« Tachn/cat Drawing 
and/or metalwork. Plenty of 
scope ror out of school actlvl- 

tlea in this selectlvo aSfiool, 


CIL 

ARTMBNT 


H SCHOOL 


COUNTY CO 
fwALEDl 

WE8TLANDS ... 

Slttinghourne, Kent 

..equlred 
for one year 
Drama Dapartman . 

Tomporary vacancy due 
secondment for one year o. 
present Heed Department. 
Applications, togokhar with 

names end addrcaaea . of * 

referees, to the H 
as soon.u passible. 


Scale 2 Posts and above 


reorganisation or the school 
along comprehensive lines ■* 
under consideration. 

. Letters pf application In- 
cluding c.v. and tha namei 
end address oa of 2 , refer sal tc 
lha Head at the School wlthlr 

t , A. J a^Ss.K. p ?g5®v» 


HERTFORDSHIRE 



OLDHAM 


BOROUGH 



qusniiaa ■ and.- . experiai 
teaoher to be Hsad dr T 
leal Btudfae Departm 

-cole 1. ’ * — - T 

wancp K 


Roxbury Avanus. Oldham 

w *a p :vX">=i *s»";. , bs 

n) tha the Head at 

Scale 1 Posts 

DBVON 

DORSET. 

ffl E « CONDARY 


ffwSnducallcn.l) 

Required'' Tor SaptsmbPC; 
Tqschar tScala II, of Enaliah ■ 
wlf(i Drama lo across 

the' whole i aw. Bnd „ B J ,l !U ! i 

ranao up to< C*SiEi ,®oo < v 

!sbS- 


tidies j Department 
ndon rrlnga alio 
ovar tha 


rfed out a phaged move 'from 
was a boys' 

.. **• 

« ■— i pupils 

st mix . annum ano now.hai years 
lenalvs The first sixth form entry wl 

« VpoT” ■? ‘.i.?.r!s , "sr,.d 

Alio. maaier, Including , currlcul 
vitas. unn nsniaa and m 
[ cation sea of two referees. (39 


vaah parmiter'a > 
rfed out a phased 

I.nHnnn wtirfr ll < 


e sa 


HERTFORDSHIRE ■ 

^o T l R,NITVCRC> . 
gnaouarofloldk- Welwyn - 

TA r .JJefivyn T a«rde» .2028]/ 

I*-*(- h * r LSUS c, !S?fe 'S5W 


Application form and Furtri- 

gbgggagjW^ lr f&m 

SURREY 

f dOLMER HILL SCHOOL 
aalnmara • . 

equlred In September,' -for 
tnis 6urrey Comprebenilve 
school of BOO.- boya and girls 


Scale 2 Posts and above 

BARNET 

BARNET DO, * OUn, l OF 
“ENDOW DUILDIND 

ool) TRE 

3o a a a 9 D 5o4 hMP NW4 To,: °»* 

September 1982. 
Ef f J patet I c B loachnr of 

“OlLplNG STUDIES. Scale 3. 

two or Ll.roc 
few miles apart. 
IJl® i ‘ability to teach a variety 
®£ *ktlla in building trades la 
and a Know led BO ^ of 
au *° Bfiglncerlnq 
would be an advantage. 

aurp iSS. ro i , ' Bd , co,a “ aisist- 
mn V be glVBit inward. 
UVLm nuyment uf removal r*. 
winccV 0nd separation alio- 
Appllcntiana to Mr. R Fen. 

CoTlfra flintf 110 s 

H.i.'v. Hendnn School. CJol- 
?a i r , < Hendon NW4. 

tM.A.E.) .43413) 13542 0 

BERKSHIRE ~ 

BE£ c, uvoon county 
SECONDARY SCHOOL 

N“o"jL 0 “<& ,,Da L#n "' Sl “bqh 
Requir'id Saptembar, 1982. in 

satetimXnH 01 ** 01 wh i ch will ba 
aatablialied from the msraar 
9j w Haymlll and Warrenfleld 
achoola. with shout 700 hove 
Did* in the 32-16 
rVL9?‘ jTrschor (Scale 2i m a 
craft department or five, to 
SC/k^Pnna'bls for Woodwork. 
™?F» a JE B “xcaptlonalij' woll- 
equlpued workehnpa. 

letter fp llie Hoad 

BUQKINQHAMSIURE 

SCHOOL “BCONDAftY 

RoTrso" Wvr ° m h " 
ofp-^d*’ A ‘ J ‘ D,M,,,U * n A -* 

i afl#* rad from Soptombor 
1 BB 2 . ax per loured teacher ns 

rI2Sl ^ - Tuto^ 1. n,, f , “l* 0 ,0 loath 
Goa (gn Trclmulony end 

SrlTff'x* 1 Communlcultiui) 
b** 1 ®* appointment available 


r°r bath raBnonslblllties, 1 but 

J*;j" 8 appointment would be 
fflbSldnred for suitably qual- 
Joct* l«arbsr of these mib- 

Relmburaemei.L uf removal 
«P«i"a*s, 7654 allowenel un 
"5*1. and Estate Aoente loos 
J™"* 1 mum payment t750» and 
■"* ,d £ l " | ai, expanses uf cl9S 
P*V®bls In approved ceaoa. 
H22H ,n f allowance pending 
™° W# L “ ,aB Payable in 
approved esaos. 

SSfilhSr on r °rscslp t' r °af 

KVSSSf addrcaa " d ""TS^Bfo 
HUMBERSIDE 

(Co-oducatlun Com preti an alva 
11-18 yasra N.O.R. 1409> 

.fTJffiSSi 

JP* ■cnaol and able to make a 
sfanmeant contribution to an 
Jv* co urea tn 
control Technology. 

Appllcftllon. forma and 
furthBr details are available 
fj"™ the. Hand of Che School 

&r^ B Vh°o^5 0 V X*S : 

KENT 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

^RTMENT 

__ TER THE 

OP HOG SCHOOL 
m>. RaetMatar, Kant 
^o-educetlonsf. 1.200 pupiu 
Appllcstlojta ora Invited (rom 
won qualified tescliara for the 
'• 1 5|] #| ' with responal- 
x! n»Jl ot ?' r Engineering 
nrhwiir ¥P£r.i# con * pratian "i v » 

V* willtngnaaa to teach 
J"™* Technical, Drawing or 
Mathemetlca will be an added 
qualification. Well asiabriahad 
Spur bob wfth p lamination 

B,, Jf available, A teacher la 
ht who. will seek to up- 

tha high standards of 

w>rk and behaviour of" 
Puplla. This, la a Scale 3 post" 
i?l appIlMilon, cur- 
vliaa and the names 
£2 d r.?° dra 5' , L a **f .? refereoa to 

$gr*3&sss 

w-aTv^ii) 

KIRKLEES 

B 'TAN COUNCIL 
Y SCHOOL 

Dili. 

ca. )V. Yorkshire 
RequIreWor.Sl _A.iguxt inns 


latlon to 
Secondary 


*..AP n,lt * uan . forms and 

8»r p KSS5 u, rB.*‘*’iiUi 

Aft iwinnimr within I -I days of 

fS’". , ,'’E;!i:' , ;5 8 T.,’r l *,s*v^ 

' " . ' L 

LEICESTERSHIRE 

THE GRAMMAR SCHOOL-' 

In ths LeiresterShlrs plan 
for the argsulialliiti of 
second ary education. 

llppor 14-18, 

Roll 1171 

METALWORK - Srnlo 2 
Required Aunuat. enthu* 


of kthanl. 


<ln»lg.i area . 


'I.' \'r'i 

f- « 

M 

5.: f 4 

r? 5? 

l-i .-a 

*A t T,i: 

• *,*.•! h* 1 

J;/'. 

»•.•>•! j Al 

A-A. 

esiir-h 


or 12 - 16 yegra of age, «i 
Head of nealfli)/ Tec [ 111019 »y 

mere 2746. (38964) ' . 13541S 


.. further details from iho 
Meatl. ■ Apply IntmQdlftlr ly 
ino formal with -full 1 liars 


U>ui^ B r ' w Vnd W,l nu..^a 1 m 



.. -I. I I i 

!, ! • J • I 

! ,.-j • 


■ ;i ‘ i i 

*-U 

I •: .1 . 


: is i 


' ■ t : ; I •, -i 

j i ; i 

viHi' ' 

i! ■ . M,- 1 ; 

\ • ‘ :• 




H 


1 



SEC TECHNICAL STUDIES 

coutlmixil 

LElCESTEHSIfIKE 

KING I.1IWA1U* VII. 
COMMUNITY COLLEGE 
Wirron Hill lloiut. 

L'iiiiI villi'. I.i'Ii'h. 

(Tnlj Coalville* .YIU'JM 
III llit Lclrroiuralilrn iilitii 
for (lie nruuiilBiitliiii nf 
emu nil ary education. 
f.'lHicr 14-18 

■toil i mo 

ENilIN IIEUINU 

METAI.WOIIK 
Hralr I ur 11 on uni Inn lo 
iixpr>rlr-inr 

HcqiilrtlU An mint 'B2 u 
flllOi llillht t«> t l-CII-ll Dll- 

iMnuorlnn inxiulwork to 'A 
lltvul In iiii lliti-i|ratp«l iln- 
r I tli i fniullv. Thin icmiinr- 
■try luinl fur vriir iiwIimi lc> 
anrniuliiiiiiit- i»ff*»rn nx* ll- 
lim tipimrtiniltlrfl to iialn 
oxpcrlnnun III intaiirutuil 
lommiiiiity 


iIpbIuii anti 
education. 


Further elnlnllm nwillalila 
from Hut Friiulpul . Apply 


Ino forma l with full pur- 
Honiara anti minilmi '4 rn- 
foreea. {390501 1 33420 


Scale 1 Posts 


AVON COUNTY 
the omvNKNn school 

Nor 111 View, Stop In Hill. 
niTntol 

Itequlrnd fur .Sxiitpinlior IU82 
a Teaclior or Cruft & Dnalun 
(Scale 11 and willing in teach 
soma GENERAL SCIENCE. 
Application lif Inttor to llie 

a tod Teacher auclualnn o cur- 
culum vitao and the name* 
of two referee* an toon na 
poaalble . 

Downend School la a new 
11*18 yean ro-cducatlonal 
County Salary School and will 
bo open Inn fn fiaptombnr 1BB3 
an Hio amalgamation or the 
preterit pane girls' and Stack-- 
wall IllllSchoola. (43BQS) 
133428 

AVON COUNTY 
DOWNEND SCHOOL 
North Vlaw. Staple Hill. 

Brlatol 

Required tor September 19BB 
a Teacher or CinM, Doelon 4c 
Tochnoloqy IHcnlc 1) to teach 
to 'O' lovol/C. B.E. 

Application by letter to the 
Head Teacher onrloainn a cur- 
riculum vitae end Iho namea 
of two rafereaa ua eaon tea 
possible Downend School la a 
new 11 - 18 yaara co-oduca- 
tlonal County Secondary 

S chool and will be apenfna in 
opt amber 1982 on tha omul- 
oaniatian of the present page 
girls* and Blackwell lljll 
School. ( 43 BOS | 133438 


DKtUtSlUltE 

i.ANfii.UYwntm t:nt»N i*v 
SCCtlNDAHY HI.'IUHlI. 

I.umilxv lluiiil. hi* ni'i li ■ 

N.O.Il. TDi* 

Thin *« luinl. with H I" I'* I"' 

• -hi ul -11 sli ml mi tin- i-l 

I tu- iii'i-Ni-kit I. ii n uli -\ « iiimlv 

Sm (Mlaliiry •u’llauil. .mil will lai- 
rui-ninl iiv iho nuu-.p-i- hi 
lli'lninwnuil illlil l.ilililll-V 
C.'uuiitv Snrmiil.ii'V ! * ,,, ini;li. 

■-Diitilron in Nrpteuibrr. IUR4 n 
tom tier <»f Cl-iltt Sulilriti 
(Hiiilr 1 >. A particular lu- 
te rout In lul lint tii'i .i Iniil. 
nratiiit A Ti-i-IiiiiiuIimiv I’uiirir 
wunhl In- nn ndviuil.inr. 

Li-tlrri* ul iu»i*lli iitliin. In - 

i luiltilii rui-irli iiIiiiii vllu« mid 

ii in in- n <.r 8 ri-li’m-i. In tlir 

I I uml I Jeil mint <■ . erti Luniilev 

County hi-i (iiulurr firlliiul. 
l.niinli-y lluml. Sl.muh. Fnl. 
S I ini fill 4 I.‘|4 , I n.».n.|». Ili-rk- 

nlllrr Cillilllv Oiiiiu II In ml 
niliiil «►[ ipiii (lilitlv i-miil t n i-l" - 

iat-iim 1-jMaa 

UKUKStmtK 

THE rOIIEHT KCriltlOI. 

III ill I ii lluml l.nllK. Will II i- mli. 
Ilnrkx Util 1 UNI? 

N.U.H. LORD 

It on ul mil Hn ut mull ■- 1- IMII3. In- 
Ida Hi- tu »-«iv«r nuctvrulty 
lea vii. Iml with n Htrimil inis- 
nlbltliy ul a perni alien* 
IIJIPU mini out: TI-’AC 1 1 Lit ill 

1*11 A FT. DESIGN ANSI TECH- 
NOLOGY CNithIi' 1) to Inin a 
talontnd depart men I In Hi I* 
buys cnniprnhenel ve nlIuiuI. 

Application r«imin and 
riirthnr datalla from the llxail- 
mnaior at Iho sellout 
Cluslnn data June 7 . Bnrk- 
nlilrr County Council Ip nn 
miiial riiipiirtiinltv iMiiiilovi-i-. 
(44340) 1 3.1-rj'J 


HOLTON 

METROPOLITAN IIOHOtfUII 
ST CUTIIUEHTS tt.C. 

SCHOOL 

Old Kiln LntiR. Du 1 1 on nLl 
SEX 

Cll EMI8THV SCALE I. 
Teacher required from Qth 
Auauit. I9B2 to teacli Che- 
mistry thruuahdut the arliaol 
to GCE ‘A' level. 
niVINOTON * UL AC K ROD 
HlOH SCHOOL 
nivlngtan Lane. Norwich DLA 
1HU. 

CR APT/DESIGN 
TECHNOLOGY SCALE I 
Teacher required from let 
September. 1983- 

Apglfcatlon farms oblaln- 
eble from Director of Educa- 
tion and Aria, P.O. Bom 33. 
Poderborn lluune. Civic Cen- 
tra. Ballon DLI 1JW tn ho 


AVON 

KIN asVY c M n O L 


Irasi^syk 

Mixed Camprnhnnnivo: Sixth 

Crart/nrainn , Teucher lor 
work i hk-ou til mu i arhuol. In- 
ternal in Terhnohxoy could lie 
imprirtanl. Eland term cun. 
trait rrum September. 19S9, 
far on a yitar. 

Apply Ilia formal lit Tull 
with curriculum vliae and 
namea and ndtlrcMsoM or two 
refqraea to lloiidinastnr Im- 
mediately. I'urthor detutla on 
rocelpt of a.o.e. iSBaoll.., ’ 


t eturned to tl»n Head Tnurhor 
y 3nd Juno 1083. (5Bno3i 


BRADFORD 

CITY OF BRADFORD 
METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 
OAKDANK GRAMMAR 
SCHOOL 

Raqulred for Septombnr. 
I0B2. a qualified taricher of 
Crart ami Deslan. '■calo ], 
who la able by experience ana 
Intoreat, to become Involved 
In the scientific facets of tlia 
HUbJact and pat-tU ulnrly the 
concept, of -O' lavrl ruchnulo- 
IIV. Oahbmk ie u 13- 1H mixed 
coinprelionwlvr »»i uii llir 
udna of ilio Ytirkdilrr Ihilee. 
Tile surii' anfiil a- <11 1 «t I il n I •• 


The aui-i-t- anfiil iiimlhluh- 

would br evpi-i ted tu b« In- 
volved in i he mu tu ml work 
nf the U'IhiuI it ltd liiapnftillv III 
Ita out uf aidiiiwl uetlvltiea. 

Appllt ul Inn forum miiy hr 
nblnhiml I ruin the Dlri.i-turntr 


iibinlui'il Irirni the Dlri-i-turntr 
PerMuniiel orfltc, -ith ITnor. 
Provide) ul lluutn, Nturkol 
Struct . Urnilfurd , 81)1 INP 

and ahuiiltl ho ratu riled tu the 


AVON 



JJUKttattfnAliY 

oy Avenue. Bristol. B8T BRADFORD 


COUNCIL 


VeSSP* “?7 

Ko a 3 m to ^ a l v Pn 0° P a r i Vc u I e rx 

of quaUriL-ntldna umi axnerl- 
(inflt umi Jlie namea anil 

* ° r lWO rDr p- c,, -* J,J 


city or 

J u fake 
Metal* 


OAMUUIUOESIUUK 


rswA 


WERra 2« 6 . a A?° 


tor J 

Comprehgnalvq Scliuul. nf.nsp 
nuplln with BIO In thu Hlxtli 
r-arnii a tenchtu- or .. Ilaavy 
Crafta, Benin I. The Hr.nnol. 
ant m Uenutlfnl wnudad 

f rounds nt inn ndne uf llie 
>alei. will britiu Into nm-vlcn 
n 1RH3. a . contplate.lv ttn\v 
lanvy craft block with • excel- 


(inufril'mi 


AppItoBiiah by latter an* 
luaifig -.eurnaulum.-j vita* and 
ha names, atid/acldrabaa* of 
wo rojreraes dlreot to the. 

isttP n FftdSa 


Abllliy tu orrnr some Junior 
Geography and/or Games 
would be Welcume. 

_ ApDilcation. rormn .. and 
rurthor jlelalls urn avqllatile 
(a.a.e. filaqig) from tlin ITond- 

S i an ter, ■ ninglay Oremmor 


LONGFORD SCHOOL 

Tiahbrapk Road, FtKhani, MkjdloMK TW14 0pt5 

i T^: Dl-890 024B ■* 

. . ' ttofid Mr. Q- 0, E, Wlilddtrtt, J.P. ■ 


V • jninnlrtd of r»ow ooursoe lor Ihooe popHaIn : tKo 4th, jUk and ’ 
flth :■ Fornrts 1 who .'do no}, havO . ' ifadhlorial „ external . 
; , examinations as thofr alfn.'; , 

7 * Appljcania . should bo prepared .to exptora-and.' expand 
-. Haieure pursuite; soda! aho.comnrturMty aid progrwtimeai, . 
;■ i WoHc axpOrfOnce^ ^ aoh'Ofnea and relevant course® such as 
City 6ha Guilds - Foundation and Vocational Preparation 
?■ -ifCoursae In co-operation with the. Pastoral: and Academia 
i/Deputy , Heads/ ' ■ .. y-.'V . i- I ■ .-y- 
■> - Uoiidoh' All^ahw'MBfl ,p^a* ; 8 

; ‘ 7, pidslng date 2$ih May." 1 v 1 


1IUOMI.KY 

l.(IN III *N Ilf tltt It It I II III 
HllllMI 1 Y 

K I MNAI. MANOR ft IIOOI. 
h.-iriinnk'. W.iv. Hlil- ln>. Kmi 
l> A I 4 ft A A 

Nn nil Mill lltlll M'lll Ini ■■■ 
1-40. 

Ut-iIHli-i-il lor Mip|i-lllli*-l . 
01118. ii *111.111111-11 l"‘nH‘-i ul 
Yrnfl. Hrelun and I - *-' lin«»l*» , i% 
tu juiii a v rev well -*-i*i *itil 1'ihi-il 
<i m f liinv.ii'il ililiiMim f ■»«- nit v 
Prnxellt nimnis lili hull- I'ritlt. 
(•mplili 1 .mil Ti-i lui'il(»l> -i-i 
ni-ll .i-i (••*tnlill>lii-il ■-\iiiuhi,i. 
tlun i iiili'Hi'it 111 IVtmilvuirh, 
Metitlvvurk nml I ri luuiln-iv . 

A|i|il) tn wrllhi'l In Until- 
ni.ixtri-, with ■ iii-|-|i iiIiiiii 1 1 t.u- 
•i ml ii .1 in ■ i h nf 4 ri'fi-n-rx a* 
fillip piiHNtlilr. (51131)31 153-143 


DKKUYHKIHK 
t;i)ii*'A noN i'ommi t I’M: 
si'iiniiun m.Tioum. 

Ml xi- 1 1 C '*iiti|*r*-lli-il-«l vi- . 

I.'IOO puplla . 140 In Hlxlh 
l-iiriu. 

Iti'iliili ril f»r lai 

Airpii-iulii-i-, I.'IIIU-*. .ii 
teai-lin- of TECHNICAL 
srUDir.s (hruie tl. 

The *lnuarliiiriil ten* linn 
Met i, I work, Win til work. 

IIuhIiiii i Crull). Tm linli ul 
liinwinn. nuiuilnn f.uii- 
ntriiitlcin nml Auto in. 
ulnaorloti to *tl’ untlAtr 


Utnaerliiii tu 
C:.H.E. levolB. 
xliuuld Ue nblo 


_ Cn nd Id ate* 

Mhuuld Ue nblo tu offer at 
laant two nf those sub. 
Juris. 

Apply Iiv li-ltrr. iurliul- 
li*n i-iiri li-nliini i Itnn. *iii*I 
tlin iiiiiiies nml itiMrnnsi-s *if 
two ri-lri-i-na. tu llie llt-iiil- 
innatnr. hpiiiuliui Niliuul, 
Wail Uuuil. Hpoiiiluii . Dol- 
by, I IF. 4 7tlT- Further do. 
lulls uviillnbln on receipt nf 
N.A.E. 

Derhynhlrn County 

Council la nn equal oppor- 
tunity employ ar. (38310) 


DURHAM 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

S ISHOP AUCKLAND 
T. JOHN’S R.C. 
COMPREHENSIVE SCHOOL 
971 on roll 
11 - 18 years 
CRAFT. DESIGN, 
TECHNOLOGY - Salary bt-n|o 

Teacher rnqulrnd fur Setiinm- 
bur. 1 9R3. The school lias u 
iarun well rqulppeil cruft ila- 
partmoat and ft Is Imped tn 
start C.D.T. Caurson In 
September. 

Stamped addrassed en- 
voi ope Tor application form 
and further details to Area 
Education Offlca. Klnpaway. 
Bishop, Auckland. Cn. 
Durham. 

Clonlnu data fur racelnt uf 

?mfxr n 4,h juno '.3 , i , 4 B ii 


BSSEX 


MTHA?™ 01 - 

lin k tun Hdiiil, firnys. 

iSSsE; 

Simla 1 ... 


IIKRTFOUIKSIIIIIK 

l DIIN I Y I 1 MINI. II 
ST Al.ll AN s III t'| ->|i IN 
I IIIVNM Nil I Tl I Mil II III 
I Mil. AND 

1 1 1 ill* I IllkH, ,H| AlllMII-.. 

1 fil mu- I ID 

ltn|iiln-il (in Hr|ili-|ulir 1 . .1 

im'II i,iiiili Hnl 1 i-m lu-r l-»r 
In lull* III (*rni | lli* -* l-i ’A’ 

I i-vel. In ii ih-\ ■■lii|iliii| ilrp-lrl- 

■111-11I rr!*i>*>iiilinii tu Ho- iiiiiI- 
• iiIiiiii ■ ti *iii*ii--* In (■'.ill, I »*- - 
hIhii nml fn linoliuo ini, I1I1111 
rin- win i-H-itul will 

IKM-ll III «ll(IW nil Mll|-|U*l III ll 

dr*li|ll lul-ii-it llllilll -((trdlu 
prulilniii *u»i* 1 11 *i tiiipru.il h 

\> 1 irk. mill •-\iu- i-l i- m n is ltd 
Tei Illinium vs unlit tir nil 

udsaiilti’i'*. 

A|iplv bv loiii-r. in llir 
1 1 1- ml US 1 nt fi-is >■! I lie Hr luml 
Svllll » njilns ul I'l't r-lll Irtllnlii 
■ I I ills mill ll-uil*** of lit li-ntl 
t ss 1 » rrf. -i i- ■-*. I.VI 3 ll I) 1 1334,14 

1IUMIIHRSIDK 

COUNTY CDl'Ni 11. 
l.llt'f •AVION III I'AltlMINr 
KINOHTDN Ul’t IN Ill'll. 
IIIVIMON 

KiNtisroN mull *r iiudi 
I’ l*- k i* r 1 11*1 lluml. Hull 
llriul .1.11. ITiiiiiiiin«iii M.A. 
Itmiuli ril for hepi*.'iuii*T I ‘in .l 

II I mil lln- of MITAl.WiilIK. 
WOODWORK. DCS I ON mill 
n:( :ii N( ii.f >i* y m m*t i in 
work III 11 depart inr ul svllll 
three espei-leiueil iiilli-iiiiue*. 

This Is 11 ml«ml school svtll* 
740 pupils mini 13 ■ I H nn 

roll . 

i\pn Urn t Inn fur not. avail- 

able from the llriul. nhoiild lie 
retiiriird by 4tl) .lime. 10)14. 
f 3!) 1 A8) 133444 


COUNTY (.IIUNC II. 
EDUCATION DF.I'AItTMI.NT 
CANTtillllHHY DIVISION 
FRANK HOOKER 
SECONDARY SCHOOL 
Canterbury 

Haqulrad for September. 
1982. a well-qualified tenrhrr 
for Taclinolony (Motor En- 
lilnaorlng) witnln the upper 
yaara of this II >16 non- 
aqlectivo Group 10 Hchuol. 
The devnlopmant of an ex- 
amination course and llalnon 
with other Daparlnicnts In 
connection with 1*1 rill Year 
rauriss la desired, and ex- 
amination courno uf C.H.F.. 
Made til nature. 

Further dotalls and applica- 
tion forms may bn outnlned 
from the Henilmnstnr nt the 
school In Knltiht Avenue. 
Canterbury ta.n.a. please). 
TIIANET division 
T1IR CONYNUIIAM COUNTY 
SECONDARY UCHUOI. 

Stlrllnii Wav. Rnuianntn. 

Hull: U70 (Ml 

ftaqulroil from Nnpleinlinr. 
1983 • a toadler (Ki-n|n I) uf 
Tarhnical Drasvlnu with 
Metalwork or Moninmiitlci. 
Terlinlenl Drnwlnii Is Inuiiht 
aa port of Craft , Desltin and 
Tochnolofjy and has its ussn 
specialist aren In niudern 
buildings. Sironw i-nurnt-s 
hava Loan established ut 
C.R.B. and 'O’ lnvi-i. 

Applications sliimld he 
mndn to the llninluinsier us 
soon ns possible. 

CulvenlKtl Down. Tlirilhrllllie 
Roll 384 

t®bmic». 


In loros: in.. dnslnn-bneed 

irouraes. WeU-nqnlpnnd nml 
ornnnlaad I-’uuuRy. 

Curriculum vita a and namea 
nf two referaon to Ilssd- 
tnachor (foolscap s-h.e. 

plnuso). 


-eferunn t 
(foolscap 


HT1JI1IES for t 
SL-hixil. Cnndldut 
oil liar Woudwnr: 
work ax tlialr »i 
Jnet. but an undi 
Work in ather ur* 


tills ull-liovn 
lot may ofli-i- 
rk or Miitiii- 


Th i Is a Scale 1 post but 
uii abavo Hculn punt may be 
nvnlhible fur a rundldute svllll 


BC,, ° 01 * npiiiTiBiTSts nxiierlnm a. 

Urniinnl n 1 1 Tinimn .. tlPtnlls front llir 

» ! !innp\0 llnnoingnter 10 whom nuidl- 

ColchgstC) . COB OF.W. (Inins nlloiihl npnly liuinii*lliitii. 


m&iiVLi * 

Far onu year from (fnjilninbar 
tu covur nnrondmuiit. craft 
with atronu Interest in, de- 
aiun. Busy, well-equipped do* 
pui-imnitt. 

Apply by letter, with full 
r.v. and numeg of two re- 

i&iA a %>d"qflrr-i taaMv n i-^* : 

views Inin Mny. ISluau^^^ 


Q Wifi NT 

n f >i^.rvcoi , Nf:n. 

^WMv. N W«P,«aP lo<n ' 

Vtr.qumni’ FOR Ut fisptombor 


(Kites slioiild apply Imiiindlitta- 
Jv qiKitfihi itiiinns of tsvu pro- 
fenalonal rnlrreen, 

AHIll'ORD DIVISION 
DUNCAN u 6WI:N 
Off Stanhope Ituud. Ashford. 
Kniil 

Ft run 1 ml for .hepiemher, 


1083. it leudiei- of Cruft, lie* 
nhm and l'echnolmiv to inm-ii 
hlteni-glotl trul la throiiuliuui 
the Bi-liool. 

Appllrnl hiilH in Hie . llejul- 
tearlinr. (30300) l.thdlU 


. AiiplIcBlInnn. are . InvRad 
from (luuliriad teuehern fur 
Hi* following vacaiicteni- To 
tuttflli nrroas ilia Whole rnnao 
with ail Internet III, MMflc 
apuoBtioii and/or bihlulnu 
construction. 

i kfln^Vl/HN^VE SCHOOL 

■™r 

SIINICAL STUDIES 
Lh minority time In 
tham Sties.: 1 

pilcBtlqn forma and further 
ormetlon, where • hYallabio, 
aqtalnSble Tram the Director 
of- Bducntlon , .County 'Hell. 
Cwmbran. NF44 2X0.. an ra* 
colpt of a.a.e.. snould ha ra- 


HAMPSHIRE 

^«r<Sft. tLOW8RC * 1 

Way bourne Rond, Farnham, 

Cc^p^plMijtiv* hrfuad ll - ia 


KIKKLEEH 

^ urns tend a Avitmiii. 




Iqaing.data liji dhva xrtar 
^ir^fioa af th.ta -sdvartlaa- 

aftijr of 1 application no ml-! 


. HAMPSHIRE 


OOL ■ 
h BFW, 


, Letters . of application to the Head toaohor, 
U details aiisufloatlons, experience and npm 
addressee: of two referees (a.a.e foolscap). . : 


• '■ . ' 7 .- .*■ • Requlrad for, Septembor. 

head teaoher, giving ^2»asS’^ffiaiSS*.5Sa 

rlanee snd nemo snd «YS,rSiV7,\. •«, 

a.e foolscap). -. : ‘ \ 7 


TIIK 1 IMBi MIOHAL WIPMju-m . 

NORTH AM I'TflNNlIlItK — 


will INlillORl ll -«,|| 

W 111 NN M 1(1 tl l| 

I ••iiiluii llnail. 

Well limit Illlil Mill (mill n 

N N II .1111) 

IIi-iiiiIi •-■! (■■ *>i-|.i rnlt.r. . 
I *'111 l*r I ■•! I l-i*L*> Drslim 
I Ii II • • I . . -is *., | , u, || 1P 

I I l-ll I IS I- *- 1 I|l1|l> A ||l<|l1. |.f 

till* II III i*ii-«-i1iii iitii-111,1 

I llllilll i-llrosls i- *.* ll.iail .,1 

II r itl puplli (401) lo tin- 
S|«lli | a., 1,0 

I In- i li-iiai Imriil Is nr II 
rnl.ililishi it it nil llir 1* -I lit 

Iml). Inn nml hni ,u-n inir- 
ll.isr - Illlil I n> I 1* lltlll * -lid I lull . 

Ai'ids hy toller lit llin 
l< ■-ii-tnimi r 1 - uis t mi Iinrl- 
■ iiIiiiii s 1 1 nr mill v lit- imntrs 
• tl 4 in(r ri-r * . |4n.Y)lO 
I .Yl 4 4.) 


NOTTINUIIAMHllIRK 

IJUI I N I l.l/Mlt: | II ‘ t- IIUYH 
si-11001. 

M‘H1sf Ir III 

I y.iilllllni \ A lilnil l.ritlM. I III. 
Ili'iiilliiiistf-r I. |t fs| 

Nf-lilinll. M A., M 1.1(1 
Itmiilrr il f*. r Sqili inlirr, 
I'MIJ. n Irmlmr of « 1 nfl Hull- 
Inis 1 1 11 • luillil-l In Illlil nl 
llrnnlnul. lo irmli to ■>,. 
ninlii-illon l*-v 01 In ursv ssork- 
almns. In Oils 15-111 Uppnr 
Mi-ttiml. n vi il * *-.1 from mt old 
(Irninnini ■*• Imh.I. 

Aitidii ul Ion fiinits Is.n.n.i 
f 1 1 1 ll* llir llrniliiuislf-r. 1 *■(« . 
< li>-sl r I f Ir III Run. I *ioiilli. 
Muilsf |nl*|. Noits. mid stif tn III 
|ir r r liiriiral svlllii.nl ilrlas . 
I3B4IIII |5B4-.{-J 


REDIHUlHiK 

LONDON 1IOM Ot Kill ot 
KLItllltlfHJI'. 

tl.l-'ORD COUNTY IIIOII 
SCHOOL FOR no VH 
Frnnmantln ltoad. 
Oarkhliialde. Ilford. Essex 
IDA 2JII 

TnlrpKonr: OI-ASO 2.181 

Head: J. A. E vnuN . H.A. 

Hxiiolrxd from kepi um- 
ber 1082. a Irnilirr of 
Craft nml Dreliin for llile 
11-18 srlrrllvr tiovs’ 
iirmnninr mluml. A ssilllmi- 
lli-sli In iiiluid .1 mull i • 
niiiti-rlnl m*pri>n< It Is i-ssrn- 
llnl. llin pnsi is on S. nix I 
svllll Onlxr l.iiMiluu Alio- 
wiini r . 

Apply illruil lo tlir llriul 
•tl llir a* Ku.,1 tilvliiu full 
•lelulls. with llir niinii-* 
und adilrnssxi. ul isso rr- 
f nroxa. hr film UAlli Muv. 
1082. 139015) 151422 


SUFFOLK 

ORWELL lllfill SCHOOL , 

III - 1 B mixrd 1 oniitridixiiso** 
roll 1114) 

Bfiildsl alii*- flood. Kelli slow*. 
VrACHLIl *IK CRAir 111.; 

M1C1N TKf IINUI.tif* Y rriiulrnd 
Hniiinnilmr 10112 lo Inin n 
It I nil I o ■!•• rrssfiiT nml rkp.inil- 
IIMl llrinirtinrni. nnsvlv i|lia|- 
irixil trnrhxrs svrhonird for 
Hrale I imst. 

A srnlH 2 |H»si t oiild hr 
uvnflaldn for n siiltiihlr > nndl- 


Other than by Sublect 
Classification 

Heads of Oepartmsnl 

HOLTON 

‘311 y ‘ ■ Wn#lh °UBhion 

| j i : r a RTM 1 fSt 1 bcaISb 1 l NCB 
.L« mS’Icdu. 


st'/Va^cT* amu ^ 

tlifuunhuin (ho ago rang# 

A iipll*- iiiluii Forai «* 

liirllixi- dntBiis nhiain.VP 

ironi Director 'of EdSntta, 
■iiul Arts F.O. Dox BS p'dV, 
burn Houaa. Civic Cinto 
itnitoii in. 1 ijw to I,. J!; 

in Head Teacher hr 
4tld Jnnn 1 902. (58394) ® F 
1 834H 

HKOMLEY 

i»5iuIil£J M,Roijoh of 
Vm%VLt A ** 8CHOOL 

•2 ,,l, ‘h Krtnn Park Road. 

All itUlllty 1160 on roll 200 
(ilrla In Joint mixed 8lxlh 
form. 

Hash of Reiourcat rcqulnd 
for thn academic year 1912/It 
tn replace a Richer en 
secondment. 

Tim unpolntraent will b« on 
scale 3 or 5 depending on 
qiialiruntlani and experience. 
Half limn loarhinfl will b« re- 
quired. 

Anpllratloni Including lull 
r.v.. teaclilnn aubltdi 
uffnrml. und name* end 
udilrnnsen of two raferen 
nliiiiiKI rniu-h the Headmlilren 
ns M1011 as poaalble. Further 
ifitfalia uf (fin poal me> be 
• •bliilnitil front the achool 
(h it. 11. pixusp). 1383031 

I3S41I 


Scale 2 Posts and 


uvneiBiii.i mr it 

Ilatx able to 

i-n«|iciii4luHllv for 

c-oinmiiiili ittluiin. 

fl**»i ill r nrl^f ilr k* r,Vi e m hr r 1082. 

Trm lirr of Mitlnlsvork Hi nix I- 
l-iissiiiil I ( v ul mule 2 fur *'X- 
ui-rlnii -ml ininliilit 1 x . 

Atitillt 1*1 lint ittrtnm *irnl 
fortlii'r ilxlnlls nvnllalilx Iron) 
Ihx llnitill ■tiirlixi nt tlin s* lutol 
( • mm rn «- il (s.ii n. |ili-nai-l to 
svliolii tljrv . kin told ' X - 

I nriiril . 1 .4)1(1 / 2 ) 1 5.14 4 U 


WAKKKIKI-I) 

tITY III WAR ll II. I.ll 

MLTimlMll.lTAN DIM fllHT 


■ij, : V s.- .. . 


+ 940 Hlxtli 
Form) <:o-adiirut|niiii| 

SION. ftUALE 1. prefafably 
able la offer, scimn Onnmelric- 
at Drawing dnd tu nharn in u 
Technology couran, lo tnanh 
throughout the ago anti ability 

rn IVtion of tmtiHestlon. with 
tha namea of. two. rqrsroea. 
ah on Id reach tnu Hmulmniisr 
at tho aohaol na epnn ns 
PJPJ9 l > , Sk-WUl!P hDn 9 enqulrlos 
10JH 8767071 waluomo. 

■ Tne aahqol wJKcli lias «u af 
a. Sparta Centro an tlin some 
alia., la situated in ■ pieaaant 
reaidBiUta! area within ono 

m as Timotion ** °i rfA 


, NORFOLK 

i &LYTH JBX SCHQOU 
Ht. Clemente Hill. Norwich 

, No., On Rol||. 13T0 
, Tosoh er 8 o? Technology 

W.V. s f75 T K..^V.7p!i. 

°. r ?Yj n *.« ond ' Dr Metalwork 
«n added qUnl- 

. Application •• forms and - 
furtnor details from, gnd 

ffc ““ & ** 

T!" ' ‘ . . . ’ ’ !'" ir " ■- “ .*■ 

NORFOLK : s '• ; 

i$r Bnpt-mber, 

4®. ' fffllL.’ «VoT°i .d“* 

f s y ss« r “£!s av.ivoa 


i : Afi'rL f ?/'t Hill lllfill ti-J'ifl) 
kCIIOOI. 

Mlfn|| I joljt^rxhxnsl vx - 

II /njiif rmi for h//)iix«ii>ri-, 
1*182 d Nrnlx I lent linr »J » 
I -'ll A I- f . DLhlttN r«t:ll- 

NOl.OfiY. 

A Iipll nil I oil for llin nvnll- 
ulila, on rnrx||il or » aiitinuxil 
ndilrenaiHl xiivnltipx. fiont inn 
Clilcf Kilumiliiii Oftlixr, 


Cflui-itllon - lixpnrimxiii. H 
Uuuil Htfnni. Wnknflxlil, lo lix 
relurnxd w lllil it 


relurnxd williln 14 ilnva, **l 
thn (late uf thin advxrlisx- 
maul. 

l/nlcaa apnllmuin i-xixlvn 
nutlfiretluij within ft week" <if 
tile spni-trioU clonlnu tlatn 
would inny nlnaae aneunie 
they have been iinsuci-xnafiil. 
In .5he Inieranie nf ecimnniv 
Indlvldiial Jettern will not tin 
a mil. rdd604) 139432 


WEST SUSSEX 


THOMAS URN NETT HCHUOL 
Aihdowri Drive. Tllnata. 
Crnwlay, — 


ClrnwTay* Buaaex 
|cale I — Crart. 
racnnolngy 
Required _Bept 


Craft, neslan and 


teL r .?a d t rll^oYhnX^. 

DESIGN <k m TECHNOLOGY Ul 
leach .mainly in l.ower Hchuol 
2nd * .3rd yearn. Rnya. «»*) 
air la i baaTc nkilla In Wood/ 


plr la, uaalc nkllla In woaur 
Mata I arena . Home work with 
4th , Bln .year option claeaon. 

.i3B , L , isir. , 7fe , TJraB: 
“ "TfHB 


■ by latter 
ml namee 

■toms 


WILTSHIRE 

fc^t?(?L W ° nDBVVO,VrH * * 

lallabury 

Uloys’ Oj-Bittmari 790 on roll; 

B^ T <m c . H <f<sv oF 


(Burnham Scale I) 
raqulred far Hepiambor. 
Cnnd(dqtaa should ba , in- 
ter aetud In modern 

approaches to Dnllgn drill 
attracted to work witn_ ptli- 
dbodof trood nullity. Ability 
id orfar auldancs In eloriro- 
nias. prqjncta and/or qrapnlc 
L-ommunloatlon an udvantaan. 

Letter or apulli-ailon end 
curriculum vitae to Tha fiend- 

! |tqalar. Blah nn Wei rila worth h 
I chool. Tl TAe close, Balta- 
mry. from whom rurthor |*ej - 
iculafa mny be__ jibtuined 
a. bio. plouaa). <3807 71 


. i >i *: * .- .t -t ? : y.-’if - i ‘ 

■ SPAiWV''' 'J i- '. i. 1 '. '■ 


. X *> -t i. , 

f' 1 *’•’■’■ 

i u s. i • • 


• r • I * 


DEVON 

please aoo dl 
ment nn pane 




ENFIELD 

l.()NliON BOROUGH Of 

(Cl H t ) N - It ( I A II UNIT 
t.liluu Ruud. Lundon NO 4L0 

^SVt^;r;^V.neUon xx 

Scale 1 Posts 


AVON 
I’lltlNTY or AVON 
KIN(iHMIil.l) HC. IIOOI. 

Ilrnuk lliiiul. KlniiswiHid. 

Ill-In I i 1 1 UHI9 4Jr nrfs • 

M I k*-il Oiiuiirnlinnalvo. bi«" 

I umi llflU't" > f i_ uii \or¥- 

0(111 1 1 1 1 1'll teorhst* igr V n al [eh. 
ll.iitiniilllxs iiml *00 " for ona 
I iki-u term I'fJW. 'T98J 
vx.ii I rum h"Htf’iHbnr. ) »» „ 
A>>i>l v i n*i , fnrntaj •» un- 
with rnrrKtilum (WD 

ml inr» muiI l “ | m . 

rut rtrxns III Uxnuin»»* | 
innutniniv. ■' “L* ,l ,/alrf 0) . 

rxinltil uf s.h.x. '» n ^ ,u l , jj62a 


1IAUNET 

i.uNpoN nt motion OF 

hnnWirViiiMtcii c:.e. , 

TW'I ..tsiirhfr" ," f , , abch w 
alily I hr xii. 1 L“ n .J„r,ptiy. 
I'.i onnni I* a . 

alien may b" n 5 ,v r Vmav»l «’ 

pxnsea V Bnd‘ ^ 

rxsn/rer vyhh qfirH*' 

HTe". (3^4841 


BURY 

B«S>! 


ser-Kf 

l&isrw-K <S B °°iv» 9a 


urthor |iec- 
ubtuined 

flTr, l3B438 


CHESHIRE! ■ 


ttW-iiAva A c r B ifi;«S 

'smssd 

non Offlce^i^ratioa BJ^ugjr 


tHE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 

NEWHAM 


CORNWALL 
anUCATION COMMITBE 
Ifera is a removal expanaea 

PElSSfcB SCHOOL 
faTlVcornwo“L’ PL3S SNR 

Sj?o P n Roll: l*J»0 
Hfadioacher: Mr. T.M. 

SUBJECTS 
’ for* Snotomber. 


lojuirad * for Hnptombor. 

’'candidates should hn lit 

•vmnlthy with tllO aclioul 
SSf^oT loyalty . narvlcn and 

“pIbms - apply, by letto. In- 
ri lull ns curriculum vltnc and 
and addreannn of two 
a-laraga- to thn Haailmnnlnr. 

aws" I***™ 

DERBYSHIRE 

boucation committee 

homelands school 
VUliflB Streoty^Derby, DCS 

S Applications are Invited 
he post or tnneher fur 
ibl with another eub- 
i) In thle co-xdura- 
([onil, eomprohnnal vn t I - 
|l |chool for Hxptoinbor, 

Salary — Bcaln 1 . 

Latlera of appllcotliin. 
Including the names of two 
raftreea to tho Hcadmln- 
trasa from whom further 
detain can be obtained on 
Die receipt of a stamped 
tddraaied envelope. 

Darbyahira . County 

Council la an equal oppor- 
tunity employer. 

DEVON 

gltua aaa dlaplayed edvartlao- 
Mint on P* Bo 03. (391 B ^ , | 33flaa 

BNFJELD 

LONDON DOROUOII OF 


ELDON ROAD UNIT 
Eldon Road, London, N>9. 

fd: No. 01-807 8633. 

SCALE 1 / g TEACHER: 

Cxi you afrar skills to help in 
« team or teachers working 
With dlaaffected pupils annd 
nslnly 14 to I A In en off-site 
Unit) (Beale 1). A Scale £ 
cost available to suitably 
qualified and experienced 
Mlcant. The first of about 16 
(Mipiia ware admitted early In 
lh* Spring Term 1992. 

Quilried tnachnrs wlshlnp 
nil 1. or part-limit work oro 
mui ly welcome tn apply. 
Applicants may visit Ilia Unit 
by nrlar telephone arrange- 
riant. 

-London Allowaiton £498. 
Consideration nlvon tn mml at- 
*“*,■ w tl ' removal , relocation 
Mali, tunporary housing anil 
jwo homea Bllowanre. fur 
lull. time anpalntinxnt, 
Appllcntfon rm-mii and dn- 
.“A«> obtain- 

&iHi35i.Wi P a% ,,, Si 

icon u poaalble. (30888) 


JHBNFIELp 8CHOOL 

SifoofioWa 
araatwaad, Essex 
i nuS^^Wooa 1037 7) 


HAMP8HInR 

BjsgiasF""* 1 '- 

80! uqij 

0QR sSfl) ** ‘* a, <fi»r«lieitelv«i 


826> »*‘*RM>renoiieiv*j 
teg? for September Scale 

ssausin; 

fUaut 

SffjFi,' °«? hWr, ^ 

HILLINGDON 

: ‘■'’"‘iRCuWggJifl" Qr 

■■'SBSSftMgff 

oi 





13B6BB 

Jl^BLAND 

‘hrae.of 

Iffl-' wSfc. Hfatoryj in- 
Q to r * p hy ■ qr fi. ' or • Art i 


NEWHAM 

a BoRoijQ H ° F 

Little ilford schooi 
Browning Road. Londn°Ela 

J5SSbJr“o e B hB rWlaW‘ B "“- 
raftY^vKSr vs.® 
& T vs;sr. r 

[gS U. 3a , London 

NORTH YORKSHIRE 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

EASINOWOLU SCHOOL 
YOft ^EF. 1 Ea,,navvol( £ York 
Group ’ll 1 ” 1 Compr °honalve. 

;s:; K £3: r \Tx'-„S 

lurnud within 14 days or thH 
thi » 

8EFTON 

of 8ErroN ITAN BOROt,OH 

gpar*- 

yirglne Lana. Thornton. 
Liverpool L23 4UD 
TEMPORARY TEACHER OF 
ENGLISH AND FRENCH 
fScaloI 1 required for Baptam. 
bar 1982 for ana year to cov- 
er secondment, 
r Application forma and 
further details are available 

fUSSfl^ 

i9^2°*3Saaj? t0! 4th la fes 

STATES OF 0UERN8EY 

EDUCATION COUNCIL 

In °aoSt amber fflff " VB "“ b,e 
LE8 DEAUCAMPS 
SECONDARY SCHOOL 
!«}• Two teochara required to 
take MathematJca throughout 
the arhool. An Intereat In 
computers could ba an advan- 
tage. Seals |, 

Cbl Teacher to take charge 
or Music Department for the 
1982/3 year only. Beale I. 

(c> Teacher to eaalat In nil 
oapects of (lie Commerce De- 
partment. An Intoreat In the 

KSucTMaa b,-°. r sc? f r c ,,c i? 

^hoNDARY^SCHOOL 
Well qualified teochor to take 

ssr'K 

Salaries in accordanfio with 
llie . current scales for 
Tearhorx In Primary and Baon- 
dary Bchoola. Buporannuation 
Acia similar to those ror 
teach era In Enolond and 
Waloe. 

Apiillrntlon forms can be 
□b I allied nn rncolpt of e aolf- 
oildrsaed unatompaU foolscap 
envelops Tram tho Dlrettor Of 
Eilucptlnn, F.O. Box 39, 
Uuoinnoy. r:.I to whom thoy 

5'i'/i"a. b ," .mtr 1 s, 5bhi 

Sixth Form and 
Tertiary Colleges 

Headships 


llAMPBKIRE 

mmwm*'*'*™ 

CjiimiarnlienalvB Mixed 16 

IftWfillUr ror . 

'arm CiiilodB - Oroup 1! 
qulrud for Jpituflry. J 


ii./”aVSo ISjrdn 

orrienr. Crosaweya, Boiindory 
Rued. Farnborough - , Ham p- 

Heads of Department 


SURREY 

HEAD Of JAKT. Scale 3. re* 


Colleoo of Artondrje.lgn. 

Letters of «ppllcBtlon_witn 
g.v, and names oftwora* 
fere as to Tho fyJOolpal.For- 

flSSsfi. from whom rurthor 
datalla are nvallnblo. (S j 

Seals 2 Posts ond above 


SURREY 

BTRODE-S COLLUDE 


w 5*Pd Selioi 


3p3«uV u ^ t,0 rA5bt?L^ 

■••MHr. n S°o 0?l SS 


STRODE'S COLLEGE 
for suitable °“fldldataa. 

tesenaft 


OXFORD 


BT. CLAR 
International 


ulepan^snt 


nequInJ^jWttooaliA*' 
OEOOBA PHY TUTOR 


B IRY Bt. JOSEPH'S RC 

for b At Ll 9 8 oi* I « T 

V3l.P®h" r «r Subjects. 
JjgiVrtVn" I SnolJeh. 
Sfiio« ,,,nfl 5n pleasant 


rscommandatlon. ^> na 

u ““JSirlEliiSS 




Scale 1 Posts 

BEDFORDSHIRE 

SaS 9 *™ Hl “ Luton. 

L ' Martlqdrta, 

advantsga. Scale °T d Cm,n?n 

ss^TMssas 

■hli 1 "* 1 0Bt,or * f°i*ma obtain- 

iSs^K’^aii 


BEDFORDSHIRE 

Bradgarv Hill R oa q, ,„ utofI> 
firtefiKtST L ' Mar tlndal0. 

^citet 'Tonsahtyat 9 ; 

““ ?.A «*°!‘ but Scale V past 
rop first appolnt- 
.fbrcssiifu 1 candidate 
iir. r 72V lred .I?. roach Phy- 

f-vVa^Exill^t 

now phyalcs laha. ah atarf are 
C(S)°« C i5?a ^-“nWlbuta to the 
colt s g a "a Com pla m a n lory Btu- 
dlea programme. Council 

BhT2"IU ,a n d “l , 'J n m “ y fa# avail- 
abio In certain earnas. 

Sb^«‘ 0 .»„d Sgtft 

BEDFORDSHIRE 

Dredgers Hill Road. Luton. 
Bidi* 

Principal: Dr L. Martlndale, 
BkOCsf Econ) 


HAMPSHIRE 

ALTON COL LEQE 
QU34 BLX” Alton 

ffEH-sr 

RSlKB , »3'as , . , SSSl l .u». 

C^ 1 Vr D r.‘| lh exporienaa “".S 
t£h and f'WUff 

fk h gr. lha e5?.„t?. n .i oKmEiiK 

:s d JBuLr M 

r..n , i lar i . application with 
full curriculum vitae, two rn. 
■nd, B . A.E . lo Prlnclpol 

niiS 1 ?** for details. 

(39316) 1 40029 

HAMPSHIRE 

BARTON PBVBRfL COLLEGE 
Cedar Road, Eaitiaigh 
Open Access vith form 
Collage NOR 1200 
Graduate for Computer Bclen- 
wRh t0 Mathemffi. ■ r * f *™biy 
meV.^’iy °( f o w'.Th 

^ S^ r 4 U .VTof V, l"w e n a'ducs- 

^ Q 9 yi 1 4, f " reraa * Ami 

HAMPSHIRE 

fTCyRN c OLLEOE 
BOB 5AY^ Dad ' flouthll,, )P tD ni 
9 ° pan Aocaeo: NOR 

s'TJawBaB'. 1 
aa-v'rs wvsssaftK 


WEST GLAMORGAN 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

NBATH TBIITI A tl Y 
COLLEGE 

Tills new Tertiary Col- 
L*P® Ia«n op .! n ,n Emptom- 
rnJT’ti! 99 - a '., Vacancies exist 
for the following posts: 

2.9.8?D OOV <Po,t R * f! 

S.£lS) M1BTRV (Fast Refi 

4.£*.8^) MA <Pobi Ror: 

jjECJffOMfCB (Post Rofl 

«.?.«h° RV 1 p<m n Bf ! 

.p SSHSfa 7.9^ NOM,CS 
ifon 

8 T^F^S AT ^s. 

loSBKf 1 tpo ’ 1 Ro,! 
„OT« ‘ po “ Ror: 

.-PHYSICAL EDUCATION 
\%.$a2> (Paot 

^RELIGIOUS BTUDIEB 
(Post Ref: 13.B.8B) U 

8alary will be on tho 


ApD |y by lottar to principal 
with curriculum vitae and 
names of two educations! re- 

aaifc)" ‘ oo " - p r/bw 


Required for September 1983, HARROW 


Nona] subjects would be an 
sdvsntaae. The suaaaasful ap- 
plicant would be expected to 
contribute to Compismentary 

te,%.! nd T / ff Jbrv8r t & 
ono vaar ln the 

Application Torma obtain* 
?5* |B J r P m . "? d returnable to 
the Prlnolpal at the oolleoa 
1BAB please). 139498) l40QgS 

BERKSHIRE 

CHEMISTRY. Resident or 
non-resident poet, ideal Post 
Graduate Researcher. *A r 
level teaching only. 

_ Write c.v. A references: 

rnV. W B%Mr°»9^i 

1400B2 


CAMBRIDGESHIRE 


mm 

Required . f 


AREA 

SIXTH FORM 




Immediately. 


CHEBHIRE 

EDUCATION COMMITTEE 

W 1 DNB8 BIXTH FORM 
COLLEOB.. 

Cromton^sga .^jy Id nos , 

Tell OBI-434 IBIS 

S equlred for flaptember, 
tilonal stsrr due to ln- 
aroaao In numbers. The 
posts are temporary for 
one year Initially. > 

(a) DRAMA 
(b) OBOLOOY • 

»"WWI AND 

(d) PHYSICS . 
Further detail* add 
ttaa n aolleaa > . 


EAST SUSSEX . 

gj^VIMrFORM 

i&r 6 w. Bo “ d ' Brlflhton 


f-l#. 

WwnSTrB.ffif 

S's:' HHWi’ Y«8SI 


ESSEX - - 

» o yT^%BI 8EX B1XTH 

ra?meda' Chess. 




Elm Park, Stanmorn. 
Middlesex, HA7 4Qcl 


LgcS“r«r I scale (currently 
?5*® a 4 — EB, 68 B) although 
tfBturar II (CB, 462 - 

Cl 0,431) may ho avnllobln 
for suitably quallflod and 
experienced applicants. 

FjjTUipr particulars 

-pflcatlon. form, ma 

a _ 

urncer. Neath DJatirlcc 
Education qrrice. Csdoi 
lD1 « Road, Naatli. 

Tha oloalno data for re- 
celpt of cothpleted applies- 
ttpn forina I* Thursday 3rd 


Special Education 

Headships 


SURREY 

B9 a 1 TTE E . 

CENTIME HK ^ DIAL 
Rnowla Graon. 

”EA? or CENTRE required. 

invited from 
S«i.-M ,y A qualified and experl- 

!SJ2» *J?“S ,P ! Tor enpolnt* 

Rtent from September 1082 or 
2? f*?i- B " Ppaslbfe thereafter 
at this remedial centre ror 32 
£?*£• »«d girls, basically of 
2™* and Middle School 
years. Salary Scale 3. 

PbftleDlars and ip. 
h from Area 

ducation Officer, 7 Monu- 
ment Mm. Woybrliqo. SirPSy 
<aaa ploese). <383761 160010 


Deputy Headships 
Second Masters/ 
Mistresses 

DORSET 


BICKNELL SCHOOL 
PeterelTeld Road. 

"puciMsiquiii 

' "«R!ior ro ro¥ 

toTh^'anc'ii. 0 ** A t Q° lf "r ?nn e ' ,O |0 .*1* A 


Middlesex, HAT 4Ud 
Tel No. 0T-9B4 0961 

/ or *•* September 
19B2, a temporary teacher, 
scale oo* for one year for 
Economics at O.C.B. ‘A- and 

’O' (aval. The succassful Bp- 
plicant will ba required lo 
aaalat In tha teaching of at 
lesst one of the following 'O’ 
level subjects:- accounts and 

Application forma from and 


WEST SUSSEX - 

8,XTK 

ssttr'w fcSixrrf.Yf^fLT 


HARROW 

Tel. No. 01-834 0961 


swvuao* r*n ■■imjrni uinanDH 

ko taioh Computsr Science to 
A level an adventaqn. Beale 

Su-fwi&^Spn'srnt* ■ M,llBb,v 

c.p r S,«^,n A 5-^e f K m of P fW; 

advartlaeniont with sea 
plot mo. Rainqvil experieea In 
epprovad aaaas. (3S303) 

1 40032 


l3W’Sfi^a„T„TAJSiM 

vylH essentially be brlenca. 
Throe bodroomail flat evnll- 

£ ..AR2i‘ CDt, °.? . *•**■««» and 

*2rri2T. pl ttL5! J l , r» from the 

spiS;.' sm'ss.' „„ ■sshs 


DORSET 

M'odle 

Kitchener Creacenl, Poole 
{As* nmpo 8-13. 430 on roll) 
Required* January, 1985. 
puty Hand Teacher — Group a. 

An plication forms end 
further datelle from the Star- 

&.t?" C0 /*fr, E cSr* r fart A m r ^ 

fcu-.h*te^ E K! ,r c. n oS. u ^ 

I Ith June, 1983. 


appointment could ba made. 
Interest In sport end extra 
curricular sotlvltlgs an advan- 
tage and all full-time staff act 


writing enclosing, a curriculum 
vJtna and names end addres- 
ses or two referees to the 
Principal. Long Rond Sixth 
Form College, Cambridge CBB 


Rcputred for 1st September 
1989, a teaohar or English 
preferably With B.B.L.. train- 
ing snd/or axperlenca to tench 
throughout the College up to 
G.C.E. *A* level. An Intereat 
In Drama would ba en advan- 
tage. f 

Application loriDB from and 
to be returned to Tha Prtnc- 
nal by 7th Juno. Pleasa an- 

gggm^gsg ) ,d<,r “ , i^oo B l B 

HARROW • 


sS™ 

Elm Pant. Btapmoi 

T.L a NohoV®5l 

Required for let 
1982 a teacher fc 


SURREY 

COUNTY COUNCIL 


Tel. No. 01-994,0961 
Required for let B cptn (Tiber 
1982 a teacher ror Dssisn A 
Technology (mXIa/remale) at 
G.C.E. "A? and 'O 1 level. An 
ability to orrer Graphical 
communication at ‘O' laval- 
would be an advantage. 

Application forms (ram and 
IO bp returned TTie Principal 
by 7th June. Please enclose 

ijjjjjf addrM ,,d "!Wi 


* FRINGE AREA ALLOWANCE E213 p.a. THROUGHOUT THE 
CJ0UNTY 

Gorarous ReJocadon Expanses In approved cases 

* Temporary housing may be available. 

* Complete "Surrey Vacancy List" available on request (saa 

ptoaoG/. 

® 2nd VICE-PRINCIPAL 


FO™ COLLEGE 

kit n' rfSSb IiI^iWp 0 ." Ro,f ^ nu ^ 18831 850 «-» — . 

matITemAtim. In an gx- r 

asflatwitK -"Senarej IVudisi Application form amt further details from Area Education 

(an A« m b a ; '|e^Sr ,b ilSiuding ffiS-Tfir 011 !!! Wowng, Surrey (SAE 

currlrufum vitoa- and names ptMSe). Cosing dale: 4ttl JUD*. 1982, 

and addreesee to two re- 
ferees, to. tha fhrlnfripal. , 

Plsaee ■ encloes S.e.f.e. for , — ■ - . - - 

acknowledgement. 139484^^ 

LEICHSTER8HLRP . 


(REF, 71 
. Raqulred 
1989. 


virtleament 


August, 

pMHb 


gatbwav 
COI 
The Nbw*i 


TH FORM 
Leicester 


'JaqQL^xiis & 

ss «¥. D wssar .3d no^ 

Ibly o.C.B. "A' level. 


SHROPSHIRE 


hrowsburf, BYt 1RX 
isoulred ^ t |-H 

t. port-tlipa) a|, 
Coilene ano at Priory School. 
(Vi-18). Bhrswsbury. 

CoUega y ** OWln0° ourrlcu 

aBas^sflff" of W 


SURREY . i: 

ties or Computlrig Bclence srt 
odYsniaafK^ 


COM MERCIA 1/ SUBJECTS 

Scale ■ 1 required leptamber 

ill a to .teacn Shorthand (PH - 1 
mb 9000). Typing. Office, 
Practice, AocouSts. ■ . 

y&WtifosAsSZW To,t 

140092' 


UNITED WORLD COLLEGE OF 
THE ATLANTIC 

Adantlo CpUege, first of thp United World CoHeges, hte 
350 81xlh form students on soholareWp from some 30 
oountriea. The -College prepares ad students Tor the 
International BaGcalaurpate and . has an extensive 
programme of coast rescue and community service. 

. AppHcatfona are Invited for a leacttlng post In . 

MATHEMATICS 

. fbr September 1982 or Januaiy 1B83. 

Teaching will be at both Higher, and Subsidiary Levels of f 
the International Baccalaureate. A strong, active 
commitment Is expeated towards the Intemaoohal and', 
comunlty service alma of the College. Salaries are 
above Burnham; scale. 

Applications (full b.v., no forme, with names of three' 
confidential referees) to The Headmaster, United 
World College of the' Atlantic, St Ponat*s Castle, 
LlantwK Major, South Glamorgan CF6 9WF from 
whom further' details are available on receipt bf an' 
s.a.e. ff'.xfl". 


, •• . I 

>• ‘ • 

• ■ y 


I - 1 . 

i ■: , • i 

t • f *. 


r * S\ 


m 

i 

r - '..-I 

i'jAl 

J - .) (r.'f 

V ’ ••■ • .1 

. |:p 

i : Vr-to’- 

;= : i-.yl* 

K-J li-L 


! - ( > { 
nt# 

i^j‘5 

■ - : ir' 

S--k» 

J 

7 m l 1 ’ '/ 

r vi.V 


r. : i- V jc.- 


L-. i 1 

ia 

hi 

m 

J, , t ;. f 


■fife' 






IIMK.S EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT ^ 



SPECIAL EDUCATION 


Scale 2 Posts and above 


BARNET 

LONDON BOKOUOI* OF 

RequIlrcT] for Septmillirr 1 OB 2 

Remedial Tuartwr for .JO 1 ! 
nnrnuiili-n SMO*-f 
Service. Applicant* 
have experience of i , ntltlf®ij 
with Icnritltig difficult tail “I'd 
u xoiuiil know to tine of r" me- 
dial laclinlfiuua- Thn work 
may he nurlp«»«dic or Uniieil *i 
one uf the M aim’d L ii I t_«<mron. 
Suliirr Hrgln 3. , 

Further In form at lull nmy »*•* 
obtained from Ml*} M. M. 
O'Flynn. I'r In el |i« I Eiliif «*l«n - 
al l'ayclinlc>HlBt. l.lillil . t ,M J“ 


obtained from Ml*} M. M. 
O'Flvnn. Prlni'lnnl Eiliifdlijn - 
al I'ayriinlcuilnt. l.lillil t*o I* 
d mien Centra. Bu»l **n2a 
Ed u ware . Phuiic OI-OSI 1044. 
Apiillcntlun form* l*'?:”: 1 
□ litnlnnTilc from and relurii* 
aids to tlio Dlrociar of Edura- 


tlanal Servlco*. Town Do II. 


BOLTON 

METROPOLITAN BOHDUGH 

ivaonslDE senioh f.sn 
SCHOOL 

433 (.'hurley New Knud. 

Bill Ion BLI 31*11 _ 

TEACHER SCALES 0.1 
Teachor retiulred froni am 
A uiiuhi. 10 83 or an noon as 

R n*»lbln thornafter to “it a* 
end of Leavars Department. 


R niviuiu iimi uhi on »■# ■» • — 

end of Laavnra Department. 

g uallflcatlan* in Hpnclni 
ducat Ian essential. 
Application . form* and 
further detail* , «rt»tatnaiile 
from Dlracior of Education 


Pudarborn' llauie! Civic Cen- 
tre. Bllton BH 1JW to be 
returned to Head Teacher by 


eschar by 


returned to Head Teael 
2nd June 1983. <389031 


BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 
WYCOMBE n I VISION 
VINIO HOUSE SCHOOL 
Crease x HobiJ. Uloli Wycombe 
Hnadmietresa: Mr* M. 

a uartarmaln . , 

equired, .preferably , for 
September 1982. enthusiastic 
(anchor with relevant paparl* 
aucd/tiuallflcoilon tei be ro- 
sponsible for a small croup uf 
IS-lS year old further educa- 
tion studonts at this day 
E.B.N.B. school. Benin 2 post 
for aultnbly experienced 

CI> ¥lelmbur*eniont . of removal 
expanses. 73 % allowance on 
lanal ana Estate Aqnrita fees 
(maximum payment *730) and. 
incidental expenses of £120 
payable in npprnvou cusps. 
IlouelitQ allowance pend Inn 
rumavnl ulsu paynble III 
upprovnil eesns, 

ijotaflls and application 
ruruis fstamimil udilrnssnd mi- 
vnloiio plejiiini frum thn linuil- 
inncnci'. (38337 j 160040 


BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 

nuwiTV 

II. KA SppdAl I; till i'll I lull pin 1 ’ 
litmi m>luuiP 111 tlio ll.l'.A Ulna K 

r^v^V»V^Ni.i..tv tjitovr 

l*i. mi. ilinli tV vi uni he. }**•• •*'•• 

■ lull- il.t. All .urn mixed ■ 
llonrlim ■ inniilri’d with 
iiitilltLunnl fuinilli'iip. Iloarilinn 
Hired man tor ■ Mr. «:.A. Jon"* 
Hanulrrd »s pusslliln 

«"i peril* n« t*»l tani her «*f tnn 
near. Hr id n 3. reniilrnil l«* 
lube rcepuiiHlblllly fur Inwni 
a clitic* 1 with pertlrulnr rniph- 
un Is on ciirvlcnliini ihyanu- 
■mint mill In -sr r vice train Inn. 

Tint Hcbmtl uporains on lw« 
Hi inn. To iw'lii'r* are required 
lu u uriei'lii he iiiiiiroviul "•*- 
irullnuiln iltitleH. Ari'onnnuila- 

tlnn nwullalile. 

lieinll* mul furm frum the 
Ill-mi. 

DllOMI-NADll SlillXH. 

I IliMirdlini. primary 

■unlaillnslrdl 

Kovrnhllln llncnl. Ivor llenlli. 
Hm'liH. 

{lull: 34 t trout} 4iHi 
ilifiiilniaHixr: Mr j.lt. Wnril 
Mrqitlrntl f ruin Meptemlirr. 
I9H2. Ti-nrlmr Ihielr 2s) with 
ri'opiiiislblllt V Tor _ luiHluann 
do vr liipmi'iit. _ AiltlltliniMl 
(liitlun up to 13 hinim liar 
ivimk, fur whirl! nil nllnwillire 
«if £1.764 Is payable. At rune 
nicidnllun nvsllnliln. at stan- 
dard rliiiriin. 

Ilntull* and forms frittii the 
Hnml ■ I38BB3> 1 60030 

B U CKINQ1I A MSII IllE 

COUNTY COUNCIL. 

HD If CATION DEPARTMENT 
Itmiiili-i'il for Sept mu Iter liHCl. 
1**11 Mi'll | p SIS) l«*u< Iter* In tin; 
vnlup I'mirn'* (nr mIiiiuI 
■•nsnd pemt- I A nIiivv ifinrnlinr 

S um in iumi i iln . Hiiiiu' of wlmni 

avn mill III min liiinillrapn. Dim 
punt will ba In Mllluii Knyun* 
ii nd thn other In Aylesbury 
Vale- In addition, thorn will 
bn UDD Hcnln '£ post available 
In Milton Keynes in assist In 
this work. It Is untie l paled 
that the aut-cassfiil candidates 
will develop these courses In 
conjunction with imal Furth- 
er Education facilities. This Is 
an Interesting opportunity to 
undnrtaho pioneering work In 
this field. 

Assist mice with removal ex- 
panses and rented housing 
may ba available in approved 
cases and there Is a wido 
ran (in of houetnn to buy In the 
area. 

Application forms and 
further dstslls available from 
the Education Officer, J.M.H. 
Parka M A. Milton Keynes Di- 
vision. Wolvurton llausn. 
Stratforil Ruud, Wolvortun 
Mill. Kill on Koyncifl MK 18 
5NY on receipt or a foolscap 
st^mggd addressed onvolojiu. 


HAMPSHIRE 

ST. THOMAS' SCHOOL 
Darlington RuoU. 

DaalnustokB. R021 BNZ. 

□roup AS. N.O.R. 63. 
Itequlrari Soptombor 1983 
Teacher In Charno or Further 
Education Unison, at this re- 
sltlnntlnl achuol far the Uaaf. 
This le a Scale 2 post and tnn 
Taachnr uupolntiiu will lie rn- 
Bpcuislbla fur llulami with 
r'urtliar Edurmlun iridlnfins. 


Flirt linr Uulall* ubtalnulale 
Crum thn IfnadtoachiM-. Tnl: 
liiinlllllNIiikn 2203 0. (S93l!1> 


HAMILTON LODGE SCHOOL 
FOR DEAF CHILDREN 
Walpole Road, Brighton BN22ET 

Required from September 1 982 

Vice Principal 

(non-resident) 

: of this Independent Residential School-— 
allege, Inoludlng Post 1 6 Unit. 
Burnham Group 5S, plus 
•. : Residential Special School emoluments. 

Apply by : letter (no forma) to the 
Principal by 28th May giving namei 
and addreeeds of two referees and full 
curriculum vitae* (Interviews for 
. selected applicants on 27th May). : 


HESLEY GROUP OF SCHOOLS 
• BROUGHTON HOUSE SCHOOL 
'■ Brant Broughton, Lines LN5 OSL 

Brough tpn House' Qohool Is a recently opened 


Due to thls expansiph/ vi/e reqUI^ jas^sooh i^ 

;iv- r . : " I ; : as- possible :a'/ i .-V 1 j ■■■' 

papuTy heAdma$tpr 

> V";' 5 s ^roup ; : 

i 1 . ^rther ij^talifr j^nd ; appllcatidrt 10^ 
i ^st;yMthjri , tho scnool; ar^. ayal I abl ^ Trohn 


•; -'Y 0roOghtoriHou^e . School, ? 

-.High Street; . 

■ Y'VY.: j Uhcs ;LN5 qsu 


CI.KVE1.ANI) 

COUNTY Ol IT.I.VI'.I AND 

si*i:i:iai. r.niu'A i ic»n 

T): ACIII.lt IN I'll a It I si. Ill 
l*ti| , II.N WII'll SFI.CIAI. 
r.nm a 'I ion ni.i:iih 
IN.'H ln -I I'll*! 1 

com. BY NI'.IVH AM 

frttMi'itrm.NMvi. 

SCIIOOI. 

Miiiiur I arm Wev. Cunlliy 
Nr wham . Mtilillrnlil'iuiull. 
C|r* i-l.lllil 

I Til: MUhllrihriiliilll 
IU64-JI AHA I 131 

liniiitrril fur Hrpti-lilliar. 

I H82 ur a* sunn n» 
l>in tiii-ri-nlii-r niliuhh 
■ iiiiillMril anil r* in* rim ii t'tl 
t.*nrlii*r In ilrvoh*!* n i uni- 
l.l-iilirualvr narvlra fur 
l*ii pll'i with H|>l*i'lnl mluia- 
I l«.u iir*i*d« \» lllllll till* r** • 
i i*iil I v rnlalill*ili.'il I 1-In 

ni'huul. hnrll|il«**i fur 

a ill* wlili *i*n*urv na. 

rini'ittn niul nuulrratn 
1 amni I ii <1 illffh 111! las nri* In 
bn built In IMiuni- II uf Ihn 
Hi'liiiurN iln*i*hiiiium)i iir.ui- 
raiiiiiiu. Cnuil hi nil"* "II ii 
mi mi v niul vIhIiiii Iriiui any 
siilinrr «»f Miprlnl ur *nruH- 
ilary mliirailnu urn llivllml 
to imply. 

Previous ouplli ants 

wishing u» lu* rr« •innlilnrst] 
ithniilil liiforni the llnud 
Tear Im r. 

Forme of aaplluittuii ami 
furtlisr details sro obtain- 
able from and returnable 
■ o tlo* 1 li'iiil Tit.ii linr at 111.- 
u<lilrm*i hIiiiwii iiIimvi*. An- 
ii I If nt Inn* liy Iftim' tliuulU 
I nrlu ilf lie lull* nf Mil lira- 
tLim. i rnlu I mi. iiiiiililh <■- 

1 1 mis mill iiMinrli'iii "• 
IDIIPlIini- wlili Ihr Mumns 

and Iiililrnunl nl two rr- 
farnns. 

Financial aanlslanca with 
liuusuliold rnmovnl tx* 
ponim Is available In 
upprovort casus. 


HARINGEY 
v Ai t ni srmuii 
Vali* It i ki 1 1 . I miiiIuii N 4 
l*rmirr*n wlili lluiuiiuin 

si .ilo 3 i Si ini*! - till 

|*ln hlrallv llnudii n|i|..-il 
|lll|l|IS 

Ti*ui linr ri'qulrril to >**»•' 

■ ■*■•1 * lull i uuil i tnsllilll It 
lor Ihr list -lo-ilav .ntiiituliU a ■ 
Him nl a llw-h inti-ernlluii 
|iri>|i*i'i . Snuii' li'iu llliiu I* In- 
* 1 1 | veil tin writ n* lliil*niu ullh 
Hirlimil ilUil |"ll rill*. I Ilf sin - 
i'.*hi ill ■ mill III ill ■* *.it« IMP- 

fri"il.iy tiuiit a *uii|*l«.inpiitui s 
Uiirtlll (ration in Miu-il.il lion.*- 
* | mi. I.timlnn Allow iill> <* 
IL 739 * iniViilil.*. llPiiinvnl >•» 
|lii||' 0 **< - I Oil-;. lllllll* nl lu 
iii*|iru*i*<l rnsf*. 

Ai'iillriiilmi lurin', is A.I.. » 
mar Ur ol.taliiPil fr««in tnr 
Clill-I till Ill'll i |nu tlffh ni 

liilui-alluu tiilt.'p*. 4 M.n;i. Mn- 
lluil Itnuil. Wnml lirri*u. loll' 
<liiu N.U 2 4 TY lu %* limn fiirm*i 
uliuii lil tin rnliir ur'l In -till 
I mm I'jll'J. ■Inn lini.'t I* an 
roiiAl x tiiiiK* i'iili*l*i* ■*! 

1 3114261 

WAHWICKNIIIIU-: 


I 'HKI.MS'l.i: Y llltM’l I At 
hlM.CIAl sellout. 

Muorniit Avriion. 

Cim lul *lrv Wnml. 

IK rm I n iiliaui 3 7 . 

llmiolrud fur Spuinnhnr 
IUA2 tnurlirr wlili qual- 
If Iratlunn anilfor rsiinrl- 
unco lu thn nilui nllliil uf 
innnlnlly llaildli-nniuul ■ hll- 
dren tu work In llm nniilur 
iirnu uf Ihn nil'**.* lli'H linr- 
l*o*i» lllllll *• linnl. It .'ii miii ■ 
hIIiII II v fur art niul ir*ill 
with ilillnlr nil atlilr il 
in I van tain* 

Srii Ip A iilun S|.r« In I 

hiliooln Alliiwniirp. 

Alipllrutlon liirm anil 
furllior dniulls from tlo* 
llnnri at tho bduinl (HAL: 
plnoaa). (3BA34) 160030 


lUIfKlNGllAMHIllllK 

INMII I l IN I II IN 

I mu A I II >N AH I IIOIII | V 

II I A , i|"'i Ini I ilm ai I um i'iim* 
aim 11 ','Fnr lu llir II I.A lilmS 
nilvrrllsniilrnl 


CORNWALL * ’ 

Si IlBllia. alaval expi nni 


II", If lllllll 


isSMUaSS*. 0 ‘“UTii Scale 1 Posts 


ilmir* |irr ** i*i*i* Ail'll t lull'll 
.lu I Ins. ri*illllri*'l fol whli Ii 
illliii* am n of LI, Jn-I ii. n. mi* - 
nil In 

I 'nl urn 1*1*1*11 3 linilruum 

lliilisn In Tvlm* lirnnu (* * i* 1 1 - 
nl. In nl ulniiilnril > Inn i,r- sum. 
|n |-i'«li|niilliil nil ■ ■iiiiumlnl lull 

n*nl|nli|n lu ■* luml 

Dnlnll* null lui ill-* liiiiil Ilm 
I In, cl | All IUI 4 l iMIU-J-.i 


C1IEH1I1RK 

t.lllll'ATIilN I IIMMII II I. 

I oii'.linl n | nun H|im liil 

hi lionl. I.iiii*l)i*i n l.nun. 

Wan Imil nil f nl. 

Wni'i'liiuiou A All 11 ‘I 

ISr*'U|* 1 TSNISI 64 mu 
roll 

Itniulrril lur Sniilnmlmr 
DIM. I 

Nr rtln I A N|in. Ini Nl luiul* 

A I liiwniu n 

At'l'll. nllulls hit liiillnil 
frum *|iinli(|ni| Inu* linr* In 
Innrll itmnlallt llail'lli «|i|ir'l 
■ Ii limit nunil l.i-Ki mar*. 
I.silnr Ini" nil III till* wurk I" 
■Inslrnliln lull mil n****ul la I 

Tin* Nrllo.il I* n |tiir|M.*P 
lllllll l.'SNIhl in ii |ilrn*ulll 
urn*. 

Fur llmr 111111111* of flip 
iiiisl may lie oliinlund from 
the hnml (if till* S.linnl- 
Clnsliig ilnln 1 4 Hi Ji'lin, 
11)82. (386491 160022 


Nh mi Rtii'i; | 7g« 

llnadino, , IBr! Mr . A ^ 

s 

ni hiHil. *"■ mils 

• IniKim "(lurrllculuni vV»S* us 
Iiainn* and nrturoasBi □? H* 
rnfnrnn*. | U ihe lleVdiBMh!'. 0 
A* siiiiii as mimible. 

HEREFORD AND 
WORCESTER 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
CIIAUSORO^B SCHOOL 

i9S5^7^ r ;^,%f«a 

5ffli^Sr. tert V ,n {SM 

Inn. her I Krais | p|JJ» fill 
1 Ini Ni'liuais AIIowbtub) to 
iriirli nrnrral subjacti lo 
ulilnr_ rhlldron of miud 

iihilltlPR. 

An iiildltlunsl lnt«r«nia 
min uf the fallowing arsu 
wullld be an sdvutagg'. 
nnnnral science, endroq. 
iniininl studies (poujbl, ia 
C..3.R. lovel), wood weft 
and/or outdoor punulu. 

Application forms and 
further details can a 
obtulusd from the Head an 
rneetpj of a foolscap i.s.a, 
I3B4B3) IM0S8 


DORSET 

LONCBFEB SCHOOL . 
Leoroyd Road, Canrord 
Heath. Foala. Dorsal 
Ronulretl Bnptrnlbnr, 1982, 
fir possible), or January. 
1983, toochor to laka chariin 


of nursery class within u upr* 
clql school for malsilJuBted 
riillUrnu. FoBSllillllty nr 2|si 
for rolovaill exparlenco. 

Application . forms .. and 
furlhor dalalln frum tlm llouil- 
taachnr 011 receipt of s.b.o. 
( 43383) 1 60020 

EAST SUSSEX 

Woodsldo School Rood. 

Lowbi Rciad. MoiilHecaomb, 
Brighton ONI 7 LA 


qiiallflcntloii III the teach Inn 
uT slow Uiarnlnn children nre- 
fin-rod. 

Rolurntlon granl* uviillatila 
lit approved conns, 

Furliiar fin tnl is niul implica- 
tion forma (a.n.o. 
from County Hdurni Inn fifflr- 
nr. P.duratlun Dopiirtnioiii. 
aauiity Hair. I.owa*. BN? 

( «t), anil rniurnahln lu thu 

jste^; 4 “n» 

NORFOLK 

KlNCl’H LYNN TUTORIAL 

O AV “OOp PARK IIIOl, 
Kfna s Lynn 

TBACMCR-IN-C1IAHOE 
Brain 111 

T.SfYStt »P "•o.r'W’ll 

ponslbln. Thn Ueittrn nro- 
vlilas /ull-llnta nducntluit 
for I'lilhlran with Npnrinl 
ait urot Inna 1 iionun. 

Aon Unfit I1111 forma nnd 
Curilior particulars mi ra« 
rnipi or it s.n.n. frum the 
County RUurntlun Off Uuil', 
County II nil. Mnrtinnnii 
.ana — LO whom in 1111 nle tat] 
iinns Slmulil bn rnturiird 

feruD^ 11 iftffli 


BIRMINGHAM 

THE DIR MINOR AM ROYAL 
1N6ITUTION FOR TIIF. 

1ILIND 

Qualified laschrr of llmiu* 
Erononilrs wsntnd lu Irnrli 
cookery and oilier diimrstlr 
ntibJcclH in blind anil pnrilnlly 
sighted stlulnnln, many uf 
wliuni havn unn ur mure ills- 
ablltlns In iidilltliin lo vlsunl 
Impulrniont. Halary hnsi'il on 
Bunriiam Kcaia 1 for Primary 
and Rncnndary Hcluiul. pIuh 
S pecial Allowance. Duties til 
coinmnnirr In Hnptainbnr ur ns 
auun uftnr as nonslbla. 

Application forms avullnlilfi 
from: The Princlpul. Quern 

Alexandra Cullnno, 49 Cuurt 
Osk Road, Harlioruo. nlrm- 
Innham BJ7 9TG. Teln. No. 
021-427 22*18 ■ (AB479H6UU22 

BOLTON 

METROPOLITAN BOIlOUr.ll 
TIIOMAHHON MEMORIAL 
fiCIIOOl. . 

Ilnvonstilrn Rood. Holton Dl.l 
4 1 P. 

■SCALE I Qunliriod tunrlinr of 
tlm dtiur ruiiiilrnit front iltli 
Animal. 1082 to true)) Junior 
nilti rnnftn and tu siincfilllnn lit 

{ noclilnii t)f spurn'll It* |ir«»- 
unnilly dear rlilldi'mi. Hum lal 
scltuols itllnwannn unynliln. 

f kPPllL'atiuit furm* (■Iftnli)- 
0 from JJIrnrtpr of Ltllii a- 
tiiin imd Arts, P.U. Bus 33. 

Kh®n l, |lT; 

Bsm 

I 60044 


h to pri*- 
mi. Hutu lal 


abla from Dlrnrtur nf tiliiid- 
tloti hnd Arts, P.U. Bus 33 . 
Paderburit House. Civic Can- 
tro, Dal tun BLl . Ijw .lope 


DEVON 

please sen displayed ml v nr 1 1 se- 
men! on iinge 33. (4*14131 

DORSET 


It pqii I red BeptninTiar. I98J. 
(IF iioNslliln), ot* Jnitiinrv, 
1983. lonelier lo Inkn Lliarim 
or iiursm-y (ilnua within a sup- 
i- ini srlinol rur inalnttluatPtl 
niilldriiil. Puaslltllllv of 21*). 
fur I'ninvnilt oxiltirleili'n. 

ftlAKtir ilhUUs ,r.W« Mend! 

IH ,,n "SAMii 


BLANCHE NEVILE SCHOOL 

Required for Soplember 1082: 

QUALIFIED TEACHERS 
OFTHEDEAF 

. lo iBBCh; 

.I. A youp ol Nunety/lnfant aged Hearing Impairod ohHdron. 
Settle \ +. Speoiel ' Schools AllowanoO or 2(S) according to 
quaJIflcaflons and experierwo 

i. A group of ^eowfdaiV aged severely and profoundly dool 
children. 

Scale 1 +' Special Schools Allowance. 

This la a 1 year appointment consequent upon a Secondment. 

3. Hearing Impaired children who are Individually Integrated in 
mainstream schools and to support them In their lessons. 

Scale 1 + special Schools Allowance. Car driver essential. 

4. Hearing impaired 'A' level oanddateg who are studying 
.Sociology. History and Government a PoHHcs. Scale 1 4- Special 
Schools Allowance .or '£fS) according to qualifications and 
experience. Car drtotf ecsenUai., . 

Application ' forflns -obtainable Irotn the , Ctyef Education Officer, 
: 4M2 Station Road; Wood Green, Lohdon N?2 4TY, to whom 
Prey should ba returned by 4lh June, ' 1882. 

Applicants' Should truftcate whWi of the. vaoandeB they ere 

JfUArssied I' 

'iandon Albfecnde ^9). payable. 



WEST 

GLAMORGAN 

County Council 

Teaching Vacancies 

Applications aro Invited Irom suitably' quaMied persons lor the 
following posls in Ihe Aulhorily's sonrice, lo comment 
September. 1902. or as Boon as possible thereafter. 

CENTRAL OFFICE APPOINTMENTS . 
BRITON FERRY SCHOOL, Ynyamaerdy Road, 
Briton Ferry, Neath _ 

I) A HEADTEACHER is required lor this GROUP 4 (S) Bchool 
catering lor E.S.N.(S) pupils in ihe 3-19 years age range.'.; 
VWdo exporlonco In Spoclol Education and • spew- 
Educnllon quflWIcallon nre osaonllal (Posl Rel. l4.9flZ|- 

II) ASSISTANT TEACHER, SCALE 1 -t- S.C.A. » 

responsible lor a group ol chddron In Iho • 

range. Previous oxperlonco and o quallllcatlon in opetw 
Educallon would bo doslrnble. {Posl Ral. 1B.fl.82). 

PEN-Y-BRYN SCHOOL, Qlasbury Road, 
Morrlston, Swansea 

(140 on rail) (ago range 1 1-10 yonrs). 

A OEPUTY HEADTEACHER Is roqulrod lor IhlB GROUP MS) 
co-uducollonnl dny school, cnloring lor E.S^N. (M) P^P „ M dal 
exporlonco In Special Educallon nnd a Diptoma in. paa® 
Eelucullon ora daolrnbio (Posl Rol. 1G.9.82;. 

MAYTREE 9CH00L, Mynyddgarnlwyd Road, 

Morrlaton, Swansea M ^ 6 

I) ASSISTANT TEACHER. SCALE 2(S) required |l MsyW) 
School which onlora. on a dny baste, tolurtar . 

pupils and which has a ^ /f °K^^ri8?squli3to 
pupils. An eniiiuniQBllo ond committed teacher aq i 
wort on a lloxlblo baste In both tho main i echod flnj ^ 
Aullsllo Unll. Previotia spoclnl wtoocf JJJg), 

approprinto quallllcatlon aro opaenllQl. jPoat ^ a 

II) ASMTANT TEACHER, SCALE 14 MX 


(Post Rel. (1B.9.82). 

PENLLERGAER SCHOOL, PenllergaerCnw®. . 
Swansea ^ o _ . ThB successful 

A6B1STANT TEACHER. SCALE 1 + S.C.A. The 


Involved. SCALE 2 + S-C.A; This Is a TE . 

1 year only. (Poet Ref. 19. 9.82). ^ 

Application forma and further m Jalamp*! 

mimed posts are available, on 
Addressed envelope, from; TheDrect WbYi 

Personnel Section, Prlncoee House, 

CLOSING DATE for receipt of completed appHcteUOD 
la THURSDAY. 3rd JUNE, 1002. John M 

pifocwrol&^ 


ir ’ n 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21 . 5.82 


SPECIAL EDUCATION 

rontlnuBtl 

dohbet 

maiden castle school 

Maiden Caatlo no*d. 

DoreHeetsr, Darsol, DTI 

TeaCtisr (Scslo I plus Special 
schools Allowance), rnautrad 
in Seotornher. 1 BB2, for a 
iroup of inrant anod chjldrnu 
it ihla school lor children 
jnsinly with Physical Itniid- 
Sri,, gut many of whom also 

have a»sociotpd lournlni, prub- 

"Appllcadon forms und 
(u After inforinoLioii ubium- 
Vhle from tlio Iloudmlstrum 
rise. ploaHn). Clqalntt (lute 

far--" ' a8g ' | 4” a0 ,'. 0O33 

ESSEX 

SCHOOL. 

birc R N« o a ad 7'i^ ho,,n! ‘ ,ara ' 

faiaafianB: ChBlmaford 72200 
□italiriea teacher rnqulrod for 
tWdentlal post at tills indr- 
eMidenl 8 portal Ro*ldont|ul 
Ichool for socially dnprivad 
hny*. Main Internnt D to bo 
Methematica lo C.S.E. level. 
Extraneous and roaidontlul 
duties . Bachelor accommoda- 
tion. Vacancy duo to rrtlrn- 
m«nt for Saptnmhnr. 1882. 

Informal enquiring to tlin 
Headmaster. Mr. M-H*_Druv- 
er. at the school . I386Q7J 

160022 


KENT 

COUNT V COUNCIL 
MUCATION DEPARTMENT 
TUNBRIDGE AND MALLING 

SOTS HOUSE SCHOOL 


Town Hill, West Mailing. 

KatitMEl&SOL 

Teeelier of Oenerol SubJncis 


(mala or Tamale) In this 
icbool for approximately 36 
Senior OirlB- A mature ox- 
otrlencad teacher proforred 
and an ability to orror Music 
or Drama an advantawo. Full 
extraneous dutloa required 
and e three bedrnamed house 
ee e private estate available 
In adjoining villann. 

Full da tafia from the ecliool 
and an informel visit welcome 
by arrenpemant. Post to com- 
mence either let Soutnnibnr, 
1983 or 1st January. 1883. 
1893701 160(122 


LEEDS 

JJATIONAL CHILDREN'S 

HILTON ORANGE SCHOOL 
Bramhope. Leeds. 

Rfxidentja! Special School 
(M°l pupl * 17 ' * 6 yonra) ESN 
Required for Baptombnr 1882. 


^ |ie n e rule Ih s n teacher for 

- jyelte. Wll „ 

a , I’ P 0u n hc *ut Um school. 


viaon VUULIIIir I OT 

."fcf, ““bJocts with spnclal 
guellflcatlon ror takina 
PhMltel Education with the 


SURREY 

EALING 

nS!1 P?£J ,J“°rouoh 
!choo C l E 

Sui4oy° n Hoad ' T“«l°orth 

Juste d boya Jood 8 - ia ll,,l «*' 
upe rational. TKaf™[ n Art”? 117 

Sf«S» welcome CantSt KS!j‘ 

nsm," » V/nsr 

1600 31 

WARWICKSHIRE 

a, MBS»8E« 

}S L 1 ?" JSpsfatton of nonuu 
work n 1n* P rE2 [1 fh««tren tea 
purpos^bulit n °^ 

8c»s Allowance. Spec,B » 
Ple">ef. t (iSS 3 |? t ’ QO | 4 ' 0 ^f 
WEST SUSSEX 

SCHOOL 

A?. V o n cl , rtS t n l 1 ldrBn “ A,ded 

raqulroa In September 

Ipoo a; 

2 nVi Uf i c 1,11 'Iron wlth apeech 

■"'* . lonnuaoo dlaordara. tRb 

turn i -' 11 “ beeed on atru«! 
vntn!l n Isngiiego schemes d«. 
vniapaU at me snliool. 

“PPUcan twill baa 
expected to learn the paas*, 

rarnn'SI 1 h IB l? S J: HtB I T » ■ flchoSl 

rneoaniaed by Dopartnent car 

& rao'issaMisisa 

• i ^ u ^ th °r datulls end applicm. 
? 33609 r | k R °““- 


Applicant a should have hud 
leadline axperinttcti u, l( j 

swasa-Ti 

PBptielpata |n anil out uF 
K teSL sftlvltloa proiiraninK). 

c " rl ““" 

SS'' Ft' ■frTBWK!; 

««ti' Ns 


WILTSHIRE 

SOCIAL EDUCATION 
bxiiorloncad taochar required 

W iemOor for email realuar). 
F. E. tourai* for aevereXy 

»rmol studei ' 

lnq In duties, 
ilo I. 
roq Hired. 


feUbnqrmal studania. Son* 
■lUDplng In duties. 

Hcnle I. Acrommodellon ff 
ran Hired. 

„ Apply liy 27,1, May [a Tb« e 
1‘rluclrtul. Wonlwooa Educe*. 
Ilun, Caiiun Sqiiarii. MelK- 
■hnm. Wtllalilrn, with C.W, 
unil 2 referees. (336321 

16003 a 


northamptonshirk IWlapBnilsnt SCllDOlS 


Katlorlng 
Unit for t) 


Headships 


Timi-Impalrmi 
1 * 11*011 


Autatant^Tjjarhar. Hinln I 

'■sBQft'rulfT— £ 

***' at&i, l . >a " r<ni|alraa 

Ttfr* U«l« In Jiiiin 



-|lin u mi u I n i man t la real dors. 


HUIIHEY 

4 r(lolit? 0i, T l ' AN i:ou,tT 

( Inmiu.iiit llrivn. lltliar, 

Murray KTIODI.Y 
'I lin (In vrrn.ir* Invite appllct* . 
Hun* for {ha i>nsi „r l k rincipisi 
whinli will bitpuinn vucant le, 
Nnmnnilier 1083 ro]li,v*iiia ili« 
inlurii III HuiicIi Afrlrn pT M r. 
W.A. Iliirrlaun. Clnrenioiet 
run Ciiurl la nn Indnnendaie t 

■ Ii-eiilucatlunal ImnrUina nnd 

■ lay ec tun, I with a total at 
over 0(1(1 implla. will) an an e 
raiuin uf 4 lu 18 ynara. 

Tun iimn ilium '“ 

tin.. 

Applu-unla must bo main. 
I>urs ur The Flrat Church ■ of 
Christ, Ni-lontlat. In Boh tor* , 
Mans. 

Furthnr dniolllf OB. be 
qblalnutl frum tlio Clerk to 
the (InvniiiDra, . , . . . 

Applies! lojin nlmum be ro. 
(•nivocl hr 30 til Juiinl 9*21 . 
(389nB | 18001 Q 


•f : Y0f )KSHIRE residential school 
FOR THE DEAF 

\i ^Hpartment of Further Education 
1 >; : LegerWay, Doncaster 

;■’* . . ' An enthusiastic teacher of 

CRAFTS . 

^ 0r September for the Construction 
> forrSr /Mu|tI “ sk l' ,s 80C ^ on ol this department. 
.•'vrT'flnce In Total Communication Is 
The post offers Interest and variety 
?.Jn students following skill-training. 
In the department and at local 


.v 


giving qualifications 
t0 Acting Headmaster. 


and 


«•- Ir*. ' 


ile 1 (S). 


NORWICH 

8CHoBl SETT ° LD "ALL 

Ngrwfoh 

dependent afriP ~ thl “ In- 
Boarding B<* ££x _ YbK ? nd 


71 


l . 


Classics 


SURREY 

TFAri?en nUS J5 E88 STUDIES 

o e c. c e i,ei v "Sa u w . A r . 


WjS o «h0r Assistants 

t-T. 110 appolntn.Br.. ~ 


j^WSR i arrange^ 

a bAce o mmoda]|on |. . va|l . 

B-ck rth Ea r q . d * , -W u 7 >S« H. G. 

teli, H *^*™«"' h Note: 

180010 

Deputy Headships 
Second Masters/ 


BERKSHIRE 

ǤBOOL AM COURT 
Neer Nawbury 

Th.r« h wlM 83090. 

ASMt" b &e a B 5“ B "S* r %™ 

September 1982? Crooiih,m D 15 

ll/lTof r r d «oandont School 

Ait In 18 S™ 88 b . oyB slsad- 

ftciii,i.. sn f d ° lavel. Good 
iwlmmim 0 for mDHl ,pDr “ 

£ i 75 q Bu 'nhiim Scale I 

S'F 5 ® 7S"SS l lSl!S2!!-a«f.*V 

p!». w6“c V 7 0Q anri r r b J 

asav. mtiwi - * ' "te 


LONDON 

n l J JJ - L 1 HILL SCHOOL 

£“h a ? ortBttfflKi 

if" 

O.v. rad ih. !| - ,nclo,l "i ® 
re far Sea 1 . rSfosSl* 1 ** 


A-n.^cn L VS 

theV^subrectS. caml> ‘ nBtlan oT 

iJo cfr r c SS"L*»d Col - 


iaun r S rl £,“*9 fc racooniaad Col- 

w K! t,,b rrlnclpnl, Hurt- 
M.rv Holmbury St. 

KWl*, Dark, n»' 


SURREY 

SftSSfOTKfA® SCHOOL 

g4S3:’d\i n B d ■% 0 o ^ / 0,,, d “ 4 ’ “ nd 

as ^ member 

LConomlCB to O nnd 1 a.’ 

holn 1 iSi/h 0 F S rrn nnd 10 

fi,®" I*. .With Junior GeciiirBDhy 

gojjlhlllty of aom a Br Slxtii 
JIS. r T.ii?*i?. Bp ai , l , i' kcale past 
J®T,s u ltahl» qualified and ex- 
E SiVS™*}} "PPltcant. London 
fringe Allowance. Oovarnmem 

Scalo** nUB,lon ' B-urfUiam 

_ , _ I Y to If eadmlstrea. with 
SJETSSS"" 1 vlta S eed ninwecr 
two referoni. (38467) 182224 


Economics 


Other Assistants 

NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE 
§■§»•!• °- R r™a M A" c 8 . C bS? OL 
^o a r n 8n s» Form 


*FurV.¥ rr,h ?"V ** 

Further Inrormatfoti te 

|T?" tho Hoadmaa- 
n™) 1 opplicutiona 
" ■an* at once with 


Further 
■vellablo ' 
tar, to * 
should be 

curriculum ~vftne* “and ”*'*» i 


By Subject Classification 

Arts and Design 
Other Assistants 


(Of 


pency telephone | 

j^ccepiod 

leaaaq 


rsaaol 


CAMBRIDE8HIRE 

M r a" d m..& r or SKBSTt 

Kr U i B t r :a. Mbi « ci 

Position suitable for a first 
appointment. 

m. ’P accordence with 


the Ely Salary Seels. 

Applications giving 
?J? t v2 c|d J3* ,0 ‘ 9* *wo referees 
addressed to the Haad- 
^.ss.taf , from whom further 
Tm&'bi! * *” available 


names 

referaea 


181224 


LONDON 

EMANUEL SCHOOL 
Independent. 680 boya 
agedll to 18 


anu Economlaa to ■n*. 'A* 

and 8 level. The School la 
»“«as«ful in Crick at, Sowing 
a n sbtlliy to 
o? 8 ^k. “ *saa teams In any 

or these names would be a 
raaommandatlon. Halary o5 
Durntiaoi Scale with Inner 
London weighting. The auc- 
applicant would bo the 
doparttnonC b ° r ° 7 * ,w °- | »' n 
,..™ p i , i l . lc J t i ona . wleh currleu- 
n*m« »» . fn 2 ,0 E"a> nnd D>* 

wurTw.aft*' L ° n3 °",flfii 



APPOINTMENTS 

IN 

S COTLA ND 

Ihyside 

Regional Council 

rtJRTHER EDUCATION 
Anflua TeohnlMl Coftega, KepUa Road, Arbroath 

^ tevlted from suitably Qualified and 
experienced persons for the following posts; q a TOa “« 

LECTURER B IN 
ENGINEERING SUBJECTS 

SALARY SCALE £7,3 T4 -£9,618 

°*,*b*s post Involves lecturing and gMna oracifcai 
jnetrucllon u> students following SCOTEC and cK 5>d SSI 

Sana / w? n, i«»» uid ,»«*« « hnShnd ssusssss 

pr pSS«» a fPJ&.i and Gu ^ a Ful1 Technologrcal Certificala. ™ 
® x P B '!? nc e te desirable and appropriate 
Indualrial experience. Including an apprenilceshlp Is SSnitel? 

LECTURER B IN BRICKWORK 

SALARY 8CALE £7,314-£9,618 

hrWdn^^ :fl ^ fl !! candf< tele will ba required to teach appranlfce 
. on ^ day a^gtock-releese courses, link oouraa 

cffiri„ a BriS s ' ■ ,i HN ^ 0NC ° r a,y «“ qum » 

■I? 1 details may be obtained 

from the Principal at the above address lo whom 
Jurre 1982 . ■PP'teeHone should be returned by Friday^ 


DEVON 

I BHaSBEAR COLLEOB 
320 Bays Boarding, Ex Dlraat . 
□rant 

■ A Master to take charge or 
Art throughout the school re- . 

a Hired boardino school* under 
te Methodist Board of Men- 
(isnt. 

^llcBpon* together with 


SURREY 

NOTRE DAME CONVENT 

I 

sr 0 a J ,fI t ¥ir« r s r jsr 


Ecpno- | 

i i# . __ hiji 4 I 

nertt ami o'rt "* ff I ng? * % e . 


lavej work. Biirnhdm Scale 
.ondort * 


■nifei . , 

... - qualiricetlon and 

the nemos. Dddrecaea and 


dels 


telephone numbers of two re- 
roreee should be sent to the 
Hand master. Bhobbcar Col- 

Ms, iVi'r,7fir?,° rth irfsss 


NOTTINGHAMSHIRE 

¥fa?£A? T * D ”'°" 

iSSra^n....- 

lifTOStto 

Acquired rqr September 1888.. 
full, time Tochnfolan salary 
Technician's Scale, Grade, 1, . 
In a predominantly boarding 
echo ot._ 


THE SCOTTISH COUNCIL 
£#/ FOR 

EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY 

DEPUTE DIRECTOR 

JI®ScDfflsh Council tor Educational Technology wishes to 
appoint a ascend Depute Director wjm aoedric 
rewonslbfllty ter the ^development ofSCCT pJSLrrSS 
wo* In support of Education and Training. TiS tea new 
fippotelmenf through which the Council Intends to improve 
te respond to and contribute to the changfiw 
Form eirii) ■ | n88{te °* educatton and Training in tha iseo'a. 

nto'Vo tesch S lcanom?aa fo*\S : I ^ expected that the Buccessful candidate wBI already hold 

K54;.'i'^„'" a "„.' n *,V,i l ,;?J post h etfuoMlon 


Appllqatlona with c.v, and 
iientss and addreasas o i two 
roreraHH to the Head cniatroas. 
Notre Dima Canvoat Banior 
aeh?o , 1 Llngrield, RH7 6PH. 
Ability to teach shorthand 

t5$ D 4fr tam an * dv mWa 


WEST MIDLANDS 

sixth 

Form girls) 


wide range or sotlvltlca In an 

S?R. a r n - d, ' n c?' SSS^T^.T'lffiS 

Direct Entry dij to B.A. Hops. 
Accommodation may no 

aV ^nplicstlana to Hoadmostor 

An ™ of twa r nnft 


Interest In quantitative 
techniques and. It. wllllngnesi 
to assist with' 'A' level Busi- 
naqi Studies especially wel- 
come. Largs sixth form de- 
partment with over LOO boys/ 
girls studying 'A' levs! 

g iursas In Econo mica end 
ualnaa* Studies. Help with 
name* (parHaulsrly Rugby) 

. and aocietle/scouts a raotSm- 


Appllcallans, with names of 
.two raferoes, to Tfta .Haid. 
master. (38634) 188294 


WELLS CATHEDRAL SCHOOL 

Well8, Somerset BAS 2SZ 
HMCGBA 

(Cq-sducatlonal Boarding and Day 490) . 

deputVhead 

An appointment *111 be made for January .1983 urtessjn 
outelandlng apptoant la available for . September 1982. The 
acDoJntmsni may ba linked with either the houaemaalerehlp of 
aserrior boys house or a senior glria house, both have resident 
married accommodation. Those who 'would rather not be 
Sffir^Ta house poet fojM M apply. Nonjeejdenl 
married accommodation Is available. The succeesful candidate 
who should be young and uftfifistefy considering a headship wfy 
i e0C h his or her subject for 20 lessons a . week and be 

Heit " naBlar ' 

Telephona Walla (0749)72117. 


and wrtl have established a personal reputation lor 

h . n S?^l^iL 0a{ !? ,8hl P ,n bteorherown fteftflxperlafico 
ol Ihe Scottish education system will be a aufoalanQal 
advantage. 

Salary on scale £14,275^£10,11« (currently under review). 
Contributory superannuation scheme. 

Further Information from: 

^ The Secretary, 8-C.E.T. 

Dowanhlll, 74 Victoria Crescent Road 
Glasgow G12 BJN 
Tel: 041-334 9314 

Completed applications should be received by 3rd June, 


| BORDERS 

, tha ,o,: 

r,n,#ry BehootJ R>. 

| apbnslblllty psymant tf ,143 


fS:S pl '' il'V-Stf.-BSi; 


any. togeiAer , 

of two refareqs 


^nahtu 

IT DODO 


! p “&^& u ^'achbii J 
School, nawlcl 




■ptfnirblllty Payment 
par annum. 

Application roi*n,a for" the 
port may ft* oblatnari 
rom fiflagnai Manaaer. Up. 


[1 1 “gj 1 " iff S 5qu arlBrtr “ft" aw ton 


ahoijld bo rctnrrind to tfio 
plreclo^ of_ Education at. Ra- 


• GRAMPIAN 

. RSOIONAL COUNCIL 

fiiBin . 


glOnirhoadquV^S^JiorUjB.' 
ftSSoV*” 3 ^’ ** *' n, *i $$6 


bi AW>v 


EDINBURGH 

DANIEL STEWj 
MELVJLLB COL 
ENOLlSH TEACIll ^ 
Rsquirad as front asth August 
of oa soon *■ poasibla thar«- 

t iftqr, to teach Eng ■ is It at till 
avals, in tha Bchont. 

Applicants must be ■ rig. 
Istorad wftl, tlig O.T.C.. or 


ba elfgtblB for. rgglstrntlon , 
l.e. ‘thay rnunt have compla r 
nn HPfo'yeq.aounk at nacl 
tralnlnp, SalnrY iuardlna 
Scottish National Santa . 

Pleaaa apply u aoort 


■ Cotloga. 


t - V? 

ItawtPl 1 * nH 


[pooalblB to 
iDartiel Stawant'g a 

QuatiArarry; 


Comtaierce s riHN D in hac- 
: i!* 1 ?. 1 ** RiudlftiiBuilnui 
Stud las or aOul valent, 

flonte relevant Ulnlngii ex-' 
porlnitce and potarailan of 
n-twachlno qualiflratlon an 
advaninga. 

ingySD Ocala *7314 ,to 
«#18. Placing - ror 
approved toacliJqo am) in- 
dustrial aaparianro. Furth-- 
•«' porttcuiarj •*ind anplleo- 
Upfi tgrifli front Dlrgctpr 
of Education. .WoodlijM 
■ Hou*e, ^ a bordaen ; A As 

BLU with. whom B applica- 
tion form* eliouid t,6 

VIS?* »*sJ>., M ‘’ , ‘" , 'iTdggi 


lit 




i i 


'.'■ I ■• •v» 




y. •• -f4 : . 
fv yrrt 


f . i 










te' 




EiSvi 









INDEPENDENT 

EDUCATION 


English 

Heads of Department 

DERBYSHIRE 

HT. ELI'lllN'S SCIIlNIL 
n.irluy iml*. Mnilwh 
Ciiuri'li 'i# KimiIuihI lliKirilJnii 
mid Huy AiUuol fur lllrl*. 
Ufiiulrnl 5%ni»tC"iiiliDr. l“fl J< 
u whin IU ri-MroiiliiiJt . UunoiirH 
nrnduate ns IIEAO III' t-N" 

cjijhi" nrpARTMurr, 

3 pusi tur i 1 * peril' nr ml uiti'ii- 
mill, wliu will Iw niin'riml m 
lil ii y n full nun hi 
rUlllpr IIL I IW HI** 1 . INihdllll 1 I tv 
<>r ai:ii.uiiin<!i 1 iiiliiii- 

I’liriln-r ilutiillH I runt mill 
n pull rut In nx In flu* llfuillijii*- 
inr with full riirrlfiiluni vH««' 
mill nnmi‘» cif twu r *\*KfJ n , , ' 1 *VS 

I3U4-I21 1 H’24 IH 


HERTFORDSHIRE 

IllJAlinlNIi SirllCJIM. Hill 

360 girls o • is 

Hc.iulrcil l"i hi* iili-mlii’l . ij 
iiriiiluiitr »V|I Ii rxjirr l«-m «■ ■" 

onniliiiiili'ii ftfturk i in *■■!' 

Iliil-t ■ tlllif «!■ ill’ll I iib «»l ’■I ' 1 , 11 

form Eniiliwli. Hill in ft ill i»inl- 
I nil m lluriili.iin Hi-.ili*. 

A niilv wlHi »wii r-JiTi’iiii’-i 
in Tim Hi»i»«linlMi* , «.?- f 

M iir*iii r.'t’i! Hell V:' J 

llcrie. i3*JI6!ii l 


DERUY8HIHE 

si Kt.rillN'K si’iinoi. 

Onrli-v 1 Jill i’. Miilhirk 
«_ i i i ■ i - 1 Ii ut l.imlii ml B»»uriliii'i 
mill IJ||> Mfhniil Ini; hlrls 
H nnu • r I'd SiiwlrmlM-r. 
niilnii in ri’Mi-iMiH'iit III in- 
ClUUS INI.I.ISII lillAIHI.MI. 
Ini- inirt-tluii- ■■•iiililiiii |m«»* 
hi Mini * I in it h'lJ l- r * I" ii*-* iht 

W, |'»ir«lM'r ili'inll" 1 1 mil mill 
iiui’ llr hi I mi i In flu* 1 1 i-iiiIiii iii- 
lur ivilh full i-uri'li' 'Ilium v|lm- 

I IIIII1II-H III IWII rulrri-rs 

I AH >143 I III- 4 ” 1 ! 


PERTHSHIRE 1IHIBTOL 

4TI1ATIIAL1 AN bCIUKH- AVUNSKIH-Hr Hf*II(l(ll«. 

itiiiiuirnii for Junimry I ‘JUS ur llrniiii'itfl ^ hi i.jmKiVs?i'"»i» 

FNGLIM? " irSSrtSLm! ! "tMh 'll "a“ V“vrl !" no.i ■ ri.ihh' i?i n«-i ■ 

■i'll impurtunt uihI rliBllcniitnci Burnham N r " ! y , . iVi f A 1 1 1 » * n * * * ' Ti i 
piiKk ■ fTondldnlub Blliiulil IIIIVD “'liinutlmi. W III „ j qV 

rS"W^ U i"?!K"A ' ''AM? Wfl?'.?. V-. m ;j;I. -VJ-.-' ir 

•uid. in aildli inn. Hirer him-. uf I wb aT.V !! f. , . r 1 • ' * w, n. I 

lur Srutllsh If InHi-r Aii-ihii- 1 ,^! 1 n,,U ||!L. 11 ? "nsii 

iiiudntlni) in n ll*d ill 1 Tnr ft I ii ' di’ t-Jfl !* 1,1 . V.Vi 1 ' ( ■■* 7 !■-*; ail I "li 1 . 

in- married iiiirHCin. , 1 * . ‘ 1 1 * iVsiii.i 

Further (In I iii In Iruin 1430161 l" J, I * 

i>.s.v.ii. . .. ”*■ ' “ 

Applftalloiih Willi lull 
■■nil minin'. ul iwn i-nH'me* lo 

Hmidmmitrr. btraliiiilliin ... _ 

Kt-liual. I- or na lulmi ay . Perth. LONDON 8.W.7 

PH 2 OECi. (478.131 1824 111 a . 


Other Assistants 


BERKSHIRE 

HURST LODGE 

Sufinlnadolr 

17UV ami Bnnrdinq School Tor 
OlrlB 

Required for ftoniembor 1982. 
Gratluut* to tearh ENGLISH 
throughput the Bon lor Hihuol. 
Accommodation puaaliily 


avnUohln hi lerin time fur 11 
•Hinln prrmn wiilLun tu liiilp 
with nupnrvlitltni In lliiiirdliiii 
Hounc. 

Apnly to Principal with 
curriculum vltuu mid mime*, 
nildrnaanu and telephone num* 
liura of two rufnrmta. (3S(I J5l 
181834 


BIRKENHEAD 
HT ANSELMS' COLUOP. 
Manor 11111. nirhunhoad 
itC Oraimnar brhool. 730 day 
htiya 

Uoitlilrod for Bopinmhnr I 083. 
IIoikiui's firuiliiuir* lu tuuirli 
limiliHli 10 A level und qnidni 
hi It H hi thf Uppnr Srhorll . 
Ahllliy to 11 " hI si with fiiiniKH 
un tit 1 van I u in* . ... 

Api'lh-nlhiiiH wllli rruiTlni- 
1 11 111 Vltuu unci iiaiiinu uf 2 
! , , Wr to ll»f* IlinuliilijijUir^ 


LONDON 

HT. I’A UL’Ii <11111. H' 
SCHOOL , 

Urcink Grnen, l iinUuu W 6 

ElnniilrnU in SuiHninbni- 
1082 hunuurb nruiiimip 
wllli a Hood flour an In EN- 
GLISH to tout’ll tliu n nb fut t 
throughout thu School. 
Thin In n Brule I punt wllli li 
could be either Tull or 
Mnrt'llniD. 

Written applications 

with full curriculum vltni'. 
iiumen ml dr mum* mill tele- 
tiliopB nu 111 hem ill two rn- 
r>- re uh anil humn Imlh-iitlciii 
ur any iirnou of Hpai-.lul III; 
tere.il In jltnruture and 
(-(hunt lull nil i mill bu Hunt 
!<■ Hie High Mlnii-i’HH. 


In the 

1470791 


ASSISTANT 

TEACHER 

Independent School - 
London, SW7 

Fornri Assessmunt and LearnlngCanlrc for [ntdilgdnL 
" children with loarning d If ficul lies. 

Applicants, male or famnlu, should be qualified 
teachers wllh an I n teresl In bt>ys J Raines an d m u si 
have had spoclflt: expnrlenca In leaching boys nnd 
■ girls of 7 to 13 years who ar« handicapped 
by dyslexia. • • . 

. ' Salary will be according to age and experience and 
not less than the.Biumhdm Scole for Inner London. 

, ■■ 4 Please apply by letter enclosing C.V., 12" x 9" SAE 
and with names of twb referees lot The Principal' 
Fairley Hoiise, 22 Prince's Gate# Mmdon SW71PT^ , 


DAVIES’S COLLEGE 
An independent College of Further Education 
44 Cromwell Road, Hove, Sussex RN3 3ER 
• Brighton 72391.1 . 


11IK UMI-S KUl’CATlONAI. SUPPLEMENT JLS* 


LONDON 


HiMiiiln-il mi HriilrmluT. 

19HU. AHHlMtniit I • 

•iriiiln.il.’ Hi r.liiillftli ■ihl'; 
in Ii-iii Ii tu "A Inti l. 
ulillllV tu I r.ii It lii>ii|ir.i|!liv 
In tin- I 1/13 veil 
I'liiliir. 

(■h-iiM 1 .i|i|ilJ h» Ifllri. 

••IU luslllii ■! ' Ilf 1-1 ' uhllli 

Mini-. t i-ftl1iiimil.il nu.l 

ii uml nililri-Hftijs id 

Inn i ft tu Tin' Ht-Uil- 

■nlftli I'ftft. .ftyili’Hliniii Ih'ili 
6illu.il. h.l'.ll’J-T” * '• 
lVi'i.1 ivn.iit Hill. SMll-ljll.1111- 
I .mi. Inn M’Jft MU.. (4SHfl;.li 

NORTH WALES 

I'l N It III 16 i:«i| I I HI . 
I'nlHvn lliiv. N.irili Wuh'ft 
I ii.li’Pf lull'll! Ilu.irilliiil IMI'I 
li.n U, lii.nl. .Mill lllrl*. 

(. i min .ill- ri-iiulrnl l"l 

r>i-tni- inlii-i- . IIMI2. !■■■*. ii 

■ iniil-.ii !■> ciftliihhii- It- v i’l - ll»* 
1.1 ■■ ii I c uiiillil.il' 1 will lu< ■; ■’• 

null ill llilrlli-il .mil liln.lft. 
Illll I' I'llnriiv lllnl i'll I till* l'l"IH 
.mil u hIi-iiii.i Inii-r.ifti Hi 'Ini- 
■n. i ii.. ur ftln- will k.-.-ii lu 
. .mu linin' lu llir I'fti* it-i «U • 
i-li-iilur III. 1 "I i In’ hi liuul mill 
will Ii.’ will Inn In In’ ri-Bl'Irui. 
.s.uhi I ur S drpi-mlhiu mi 


Other Assistants 


HAMPSHIRE 

hi iji'iiu ii (in **i.| , i . iptii’i . 

I'lll / l.ll Al II 1 A r I In I «-.*• <1 
I ,|.l II ■ l( A I'll V In 'II .iilil ' V 

liu-l In. 1 1 1 II1|..>.II > IhII-iIIIU 1 

■u>l»iliiliiu i nl dm lim ulifti-m r 

lit ll II .1. IU' I Ill'll IT llll I 

Ir.iir — iHiftftllilllll nl .1 ii.-rui.i- 

llr ul I 111 1-t I nil* nppuim nit- nl 
lur it ftiiltulil. 1 .iPlUl. mil Hm • 
■ill .i in siillr- , . , . 

:\|i|ih with lull Hi I'll « 
■mil ii.iin.-ft ul twu ri'li'ii-i’ft ».i 
I II n lll-iuliulftfri'ftft. I .11 II- 
luiriiiiuli HIM. I- m nhui uiiiiti 


■■!■ in- rl.-ii' «■ . 

Lotirr ul iii'iilli’iil Inn. mi i'l- 
■-uhllli vlln.’ ami niinii’ft ul 
l hri-l" rrfPTt’PH lu Inn Ih’.lil; 
■ niiHtf-r. I47D3UI 182424 


(iLCNllUWUU SI.NIim 
SCHOOL . _ , 

naciuirad Buplombpr. Qiml- 
If led loncliar Tor . Entillali in 
'O' level In sfiiull Initependi’iit 
nehaal Tor ill r la. Uurnhum 

biu In. Ln ii Ann Allowolll’f. bll- 
pprnnmiatluii . 

Apply in writing with I'tirrl- 
c ulum vltan to: The llnatlinlft* 


treHft. airmlownr bon lor 

bt'lioul, 3 El vu stall Plan-. 

Laiidan S.W.7. tSHOSSI 

1 By 4 44 


LIVERPOOL 

MERCHANT TAYl.OBN' 
M.lioni. 

t'l-iiftl.J. Lift i-riuiul. 123 lllji* 

« lull "'I'" II ill- nl : II . Mfl 
A tirn.lutil *■ Ii ri'iliilird In 

M'litflllliiT I’JHII In ti’ai Ii t.ll ■ 
uilftli iiirumilii.iii Mir Si'iiuul. 
llll- H.ilurv will In- on lnir- 
ii li mu Kinli- 1 «»r hralr u dr- 

■ •find lull 

■■iiaRfli-ailutiH. Tin’ Miii'crkftfiil 
■■amll.liiti' will bn nlipi- 1 -loil lu 
.live linlii wllh nmnnh uml e*- 
iri.-r urrfculur aril vltlm. 

A full currlf ulum vltru 
lugf'tlinr with the immi'H nr 
two rnfnraOH nhould roach the 
Ilcadmantni- aw »uc»ii un punM- 
IjIg. Furllior datallw will bi 1 
round In P.S.V.D. (476H21 

1B2422 


OXFORDSHIRE 

RAT3LKV COLLCr.Ei 
Rom iili-nil to ntnri In M<« Bum- 
mrr Turin 1983. nn EuiiUbIi 
iirudiiati- lu tnncll I-.ikiIIhii 
1 lirifiiiiliiuit tlm ucfluul. I lie 
liuftk in iilcnlly Riiliuil to ftuiim- 
■nii* wliu lio» iiiuiihi fur a 
will lu uml Inis ■'ftiinrlnni u ul 
■A' Ipvi'l uml flglirlilun pri'im- 
rollon. ,, 

A i>|ilUut lulls wllli lull r.v. 
iiiinirn. mJdi-nnni'ft and inln- 

P iliaiiL- numbnrH of twu ri'< 
pri'cs Hi Tito Warden. Iludlay 
CiiIIh uu. AlilnjiUnn. „ Oxford - 
Hilri*. 0X14 aillt. < 477 f|£ 4a4 


OXFORDSHIRE 

AUlNonoN SCHOOL ^ _ 

W .tS./lnilpnnndnnt. H.M.C.. 

□ buy* 11 - IB. Aonrclhin 
nnd L)iiy} 

nc(|iili’i!>l fur Hnptpiubpr 1UHV. 
IluniJiirft Ciruilunli' tu ki.iirli 

LNtlLIMI Hirnuti limit the 

hdipiil. Ahllliy kn uffnl 1 liliili 
nun 1 1 ty qnmnn runclilun wuiilil 
hr un udvnillniiP. _ 

I’ull clt-'iailH r i’< ini : Tin- 

lleiiil miiilrr, Ahlmillul 1 

hthoul. OfthirUnlili'c. ( 43 UMBl 
18*2424 


MIDDLESEX 
s r in i i n's si'iini'i 
Nm Hill uml. Ml.hl» . 
iii.ici.a-n.lft'i.k I iu\ .’H.iiirihuu 
6| llti.1l III lift it Hull |.tll>l I* 

I hl-lllnr Iki-pk -'1411 Illilftl 

I hi mil* 

■ l >1 .1 1 1 1 Iril Aft'ilxtiiiil ln.ii luu >'l 
t.l « X ■ ll -VI'IIN . «" ftli'U'- .Mu 1 

ftftlll-k Ul llll- .Sl-llllll HI IlllMl III' 

lu mill Im hnllii'l ' V 'ill'' " 
H-ftrl. sui.irft uu Hm iili'im 
Sr all' in • iii'dluii lu •■u.ilil li n • 
ihui'i uml i i nii*i’ii’iu 

I’Ii-iiiu- .iniilft lu ftftrllinu »u 
Hit* lli’.idmlftirm". »ylili l ■* 
t nl vi- Uny uml i-vpiiIuu H'Ip* 
iiIi.iiip iiunihiTMi .mil ,1, »iiii"ft 
l-l-H-l f-l’H. (3563111 I II Jft- 4 

OXFORD 

NT.CLAIIE'8 I1ALI. 

Sri 1 ail vc-rl I nnmeii uiulrr hlftth 
I iii-ili Cnlh-uri f4 7»al_l l_BWA34 

SUFFOLK 
I III. I llltll Sf’llfllll. 

Hi 1 1 v 61 . I.ihimmlft. sin full. 

II . Nl I'n-ril . I in v uml 
llu.irillnir 6Hf» ini|iMft 
lli'iliiir.p.l fur Sriilrmlii-i . 

l.uii lu-r of lu •> 

I ‘A’ level, li I* “ 

tluii ul iinii.ilutnii'iir tlml all 
Htnff shull nli.iri’ hi llii- re* 
Hidi'lilliil dulloii ul thin |iri;- 
dumlnuntly buiirilliin Selim il. 
A cnntribiitlon to Miimeu anil 
iixiru iiirriculnr iicklvltl.ift I* 
also rnqiilrml. Hnlnry. aliuvi- 
Burnham. Frnr luinril «lld 
Icid^lnu uviiilahln lur iluiilr 

*Ap'ply with full C V.. lu- 
L-liidlmi unmi'ft. uiiilrrHirn ami 
tulunlinnr imnilirri uf tvvii rr- 
furnrs, lu Min llunrtmn'ihir 
I477H6I 1 82624 

SURREY 

I'AllSONb Ml-. All hClltlUI. 
Asliipuil. Hurrnv 
drift' Inilnprnili'ul iluv ami 
liuiirdlui] ni-luiiil 
r.llfihA mill CiSA memlinr 
(i riu luu tc rniiuiml In tn-lu 
wllli Groiirui.liy In Hlilh l urm 
mill .1 Hillin’ 1 'lUHi.aft mill In 
lunch Klftili Kurin Ei niinnili ■> 
tu "O' anti 'A* level. Rutin 


LONDON 

rtiu UNI. iiii i \ N 1 1 i .m ini; 

Mil . ii IIIMI1 

ii. r ii *■ i i 

.* I " li’ft ■*). lll.l lluilil. liilliin. 

I lull. \VI3 MAX 

I '.III* ill! l->> 

It ■-■|Ull I’ll 1.11 < M.|lll-|llll.-| t >1 11 .1 . 

■ I .11 .1.1 ll.lt ■■ tllftl.ll I .HI III Mil li 
l■'lll|■.■l 111 ft OOP ■* rill- .11'1'iilut- 
■llt-lll Plllin lull in |i.it linn-, 
l-r u.-ral lllftluil lri|.li|i|.| In 
■ll’ iPt'rl .n .tllnlilp 1 ml a 
■llrill.l.'ft.illftl l.n 'A' 1 ■■ ft ■ - 1 

■ft ■ I ll ur Irm liri ftftliil I ulihl nlftii 
..Ii.iit A ’ li’ftiU luift I 1 1 1 mi 1 ll 1 

■Hill I*. ft u ■mill In- m l- 

• i.itir.1. i44.Mll! _ 1H’.5HJJ 

OXFORD 

1151. ftf A f lit IN Y 6I.IIIMH. 
Itriiuli •■«! ■■•■|il rmli'-i . I ’HI.'., n 
l.i iiiliiulr rr.li I'PI "I Ills- 
11111 % in 11 IpipI isnilal null 
I i iiiii'inh I 'Hli I ■■ III ill ft • nml 
|NI.I.|I'II JlllltlM luilllft. 

Ili'ftlilrlll . II ■ 

.Mil'll' nllnn-. ft. IHi » in (Ii n- 

him i Ha.- * uml 

■ulilri'ftftPft I ftft (Hi i «.|«- iilnun 
llllllll'.-l ft ' Ml .1 li'I'-l Tft lu 
I lie llr ml in I ft Hr s* H*r si 
A ill in m» '■• liunl Piillruft 
Iiiiii |l■ 1 'l■Ml■>■l■■l1 Hill. !*»■ 


Other Assistants 


^Jh’iir school 

RlmlMombr. Avon. R6SS 

llumdby, .SfhobirftVLwi., 

Aft 'lift! uiit l ...k- 

..•sfiSA.TS 

An Interest In ^mpu lar Sm' 
dir* wm, Id be »n advanu’S?- 
Aironm, Dilation Ii ■vbiSSJi' 
"i onrvin ftvlllina io 

liuiiNn. i ii iur In n n|pl«' I* 
inn hiiuftn. Salary aiconhnV?' 
Iltirnhitin Kraio | ivith 'SS.i 0 

fur pBitoral* 4 !? 

ft|»iiiftllii|iili>ft. ” , ni r». 

I urilinr iiMnlla and budIIc. 
Mi m l.irin uvnjlable from (hi 
lIpnilmilHIrr. (3B4531 18a«J 


Home Economics 
Other Assistants 


puftt for Hut lulily final ll Iml I 

nkiiorlnnCi'U aiipllEdiit . Lim- 
dun fringe nlliiwunri'. Ihir- 


iilinm. (liiviirnmonl nuiHiriiuim- 
Vlaii. 

Apply In Hrudinlftli-uaft wllli 
I'lirrli'uiuni vltun nml minim, ul 
Iwn rnform'6. (3R46GI I 82624 


History 

Other Assistants 


HKRKSH1RF. 

6T MARY 'tft Cl »N VI M 
Aft' .ll llPrkft 61.5 ! 1 1 1 
R.-inih Ml lur ftriili-niliri 
1 'IH'2 : I. ft III'I lull! ml 'I'm lu-l 

lui Nr tullrftfturk .lull lire** 
mill' lii'l 

ApiMli ul Imift ftft llll i ftft i" i •• 1 
I it.-iii i-ft In I lir IlniiiluilHll-p-'ft 
( 3 K 4'IIJ i IHSU'24 


LONDON 

hPiiiur (liri*- s< liuul hi Nurili 
L.imiliiii min In - * luHiprli-m ■■«! 
Niimllr wurk rmi.lUT. lei. HOI* 
HA I '2. I 311 AMI l IH3II24 


WALKS 

l , i'Miliu > . ml 1. 1 ur 
l.ulwyii Iluv. Nurili Wale* 

1 Mill* ti«i iiih'iik !!■ uu-illii'l I 

Iluv hi liuul. 3IHI ill rl»« 

A in-rum with pupruv •■ml 
f h n 'il anil lu Iitiii li Ni-i'il Irvftlirk 
lu ■(•' nml Craft lu A Irvrl 
I* rnnil I’l'il lur '*i-i«l.-iiilii i r 
I 'IH'2 . An mu i'll mi I ■111111^11111- 
Itv lur ii ftv>-ll (iiialil I piI v uiiiui 
IPa'-IIPr. Mrs lili 1 in pri-li-rn-il 
•Hid ll ftvIllliiiliiPHft In I'll" 1 
full inirt III lb" Mfr ul Mu- 

arluiul "ftBimilul. Si iilii 1. 

I.pltoi uf apitlli ul I tiirrh il- 
ium vliiii- mid IMIHM ul ihrtT 
rnfrr.-pft lu flu* lli 1 iiiliiiuftlni ■ 
(4711)91 iH.inaa 


READING 

Tllf. A HUEY SCHOOL. 

Knatlimi 

R X nillECIT QUANT/ 
•IDKPrNIJKNT 

VMEiW-* TO TKM: " 

lii'uiniliuul tlio Halim il tu 
Inivoriiliy Enirunrn Miuului'd. 
A Hcujn 2 or 3 liuul la uvull- 
abln fur ii nilltubly fiunl If Ini 
aiul nxuui'inui-nil i i Biidliliiln. 

I'lnuria pjiiijy tu Hut llnari. 
tnlntrnnii. <3113371 m'24'24 


BERKS HI HE 
ST MAUY'H UMNVF.NT. 

Aai'ut. narkh, M.B MK. 

riiiiulrn.l f»r Knin.uiuiPr. I 'lll.l 
mi iinNlfitnul IIIMnry Ipailmr. 
Huluiin Ciilhulh iii-iil "I rril. 
in ruinimulni lull aviiilulili' 

A|i|illi:ii( litiis ftvllli Iftvu i’" - 


rumhi'ih tu llie ll■•ulhul(•M'■ l '•*■. 
1384911 

BERKSHIllE 

iiuitfiT MJlitil: 

nuiuiiiiMiiiiip. 

Day ami IIuiii-iIIIki Hi liuul lur 
flll-lN 

Rcuiiiroil lui-Hi-iilcinlior, 

1 IIH‘ 2 , (1 mil null' HUtui-lun In 
k nut'll Mini my Hmilinliuul. Ilia 
Hlilllur Hi-fionl. Wllhllillinftn tu 
lenrli . Ilnlialiiun I'.ihuuilliiii nr 
Cniliiiitiri a nil HtlvmilniiP . 

A>;< miiiiiuilnlliiil liiinftllilv 

uvalfiililn In Irriii tliiin fur n 
Hliigln pni-mifi wllllim. in hell* 
hii|ki rvifiliiii 111 lliiitrdlun 

Aiipiy tu . I'l-liii'tiiiii wiili 
rjiiirliuluni vlrim uml uaumi. 
u(lilriia«i<a mill IbIp|>Iuiiiii iiiiiii- 
linrii nr twu rumi'i'iia. tS9lM«D, 

CAMBKlDGEHinilE 
Kiunv i.cmtu'.. i'l ttiij hiiijI; 
rurd, CiimhOngo. 8fi«ka ■A’ 
level lllutorv tulur |«r 
Haptemhor. 1883. Ill ndd clun 
tu tpacliTnii Min punt .will In* 
oludo numii uatnlii|Htr6iivn auu 
rnsiilniilial duthja. ■ . . _ 

Apply tn The . 1'rlnripul. 
with rull curriculum . vllan uml 

. iaaaj?Sj moa cif - ww ""fsMii 

: HARROW 

aw™,. 

on 'O' anil nn 'A‘ levnl nruup; 
..an . added rnoomnientinklup 
wogld be thu ability to cearh 
French to •O' levol and/or 
. Rilddle-HDhoul English. The 
total would bo equivalent tit u 


SOMERSET 

Till'. IIAi.l. hCllOOl. 

vXb a ■ > T yniira 

Hettulri'tl In Hniitnniber. .an 
exiiei-lniu ml inaiilinr iijT . I-in 
gllnli tu CiH.Ji. mid ‘O' levnl 
wllli nhllllv In umi nwn luve 
uf (tternciira lit Jim uihimnnii 

» f lllrl* illiprt IJf - 17 yeura. 
iiriiUam Hi:nlu, Ouvor nmhnt 

,, rar , « ,, fa.v. anil twu 

rs P ot *” ^ ,n ^r - "hsw4 


WAKEFIELD 

ELU Of ILLS ' HIGH 

September, , En* 
at to snare, the 
-.-the ■ HubJcqt ■ 
phouL the •cnool to Uni 
ralty -on trance standard. 

The post could be sultabl 
for Romogni seekina 's dial* 1 
Inndtnc first, appointment or 
for an eKnertancod teschar. 

Apply Hand mJbii'ssb glvln 
dotalfs of qiiBifriostions nn 
BKporianca and the narnen o 
reiareaa. (38879) 1B34B' 


WORCEBTEU 

Lcni'rlriii ril 1 1 • * I.i iMiulnlftf 

rpiiiiirmi mi 

km ft ■uni NimllpftftMi I- . I'Ji'l 

iu mi'ii'i mi. nn* *: 

ii ml vi 1 iliilli"* A r»-«»l*l«*i»> i 

inifti . * > nn I’lViVx i ,1 

IMH'2 ul l.iiilim v I'MI3 I nr 
■hrliiilft ■■|■J■Iv In’ llu lilii'IJ'- 
ill. I inf ‘-'"".l;,, ft* »r,U 

filW. 1, wmm ww, 1h8!«m 


Mathematics 

Hoads ol Department 

C1IF.HIIIRE 

I.AWTIIN IIAi.l. hi 'IM Hll- 

Cluirrh l.nftft-fiMl. h|.»l* p-nli’ 

Urn! ! *1 m! I r ml N" i»Ip r . 

1 'IBM •* I aiirfTi'jii "*• tirmliiulp 

lu Iniu’li Math ijM'.'* . 

I'll V*l* * I" »•«•.*■• ’ll level. 
liiiri-i'Bi In llniiiiiiiiliiu ***'!■ 

■•■iilii 1 . Tin' i*u<> I I* I •• in in icery. 
m tiivrr illrtlrriillft Iwavr. wllli 
IiiibmIIiIII ty nl firiliii mud* 
im rum nn ii i m a laili'i u 1 **'*- , 
Aiiillii.iilltiilft III tin. Ilnl'l’ 
iniihler Wllli I Iirrli Ilium vllae 

KAJMaASne tKiiffi 


HATH 

»S^ ,N 7 ,^ ,MaE8 CHOOl 

Ri'iiuln-il In fiprurmber, atthn 
lur a y.ior uf ourmBhoiiui , 
''“‘i'V tirudunio IprsiarRt! 
ftftliil nn liitnrriiit In camputlnai 
I ii iP'i' li Mnlhrmatici io 0. * 
ft! 1 '' , Mnlveralty bcholan^tp 
lrvi-l (.unimliniont lo lha lib 
■•I '• liuerdiuu school with « 
•ifti'lv (lirlMlon iradiiioni 
.-ftftPnllsI. tin lull, from “hi 

I 3 113 J*)l 183(34 


BRIGHTON 

ST MARY'S HALL 
. Brluhton 

C.liurch ol England Public 
School for Olrl, 

Required for 6opiBmb*r, 
I 'IH'2. a fully qualified 
ili-uUuotr to tauh 
Mutlii'inutlrs up to 'A 1 
left id. nnd University Entr- 
iime ntnmlnrd. Experlanct 
not "Hftitntlal. Salary: Bor- 
iilinm Hrnln. 

Apply In writing with 
'■"rril ulum vlino aria minn 
■mil mid rr itftiiii of two ri- 
I'.t'" 1 * In tlm lletdmli- 
ir"ftft. Hi Mary's Hill, 
Itnftii-rii Huail. Brljihton, 
SiiftK-ft II N 3 3JK. I3S04B1 


BRIGHTON 

ItOKDIiAN SCHOOL 
nrluhlon 

Ki'nnlrcd In Srptombir. 
1'UCJ. ■■ Middle Sehool 
i mini'll lorn lior to IM» 
Mnf lieniullrn tu 18*14 V«r 

lllllH 11 11 l« 

I'li van .ll i:ilm Ujinn. Port if 

■ I-Siili-Iil . Hiiriiliam Scale I 
ftftliil Irne in i omBindMWn 
in iftiirii i"r ftome " u \ « 

Ml I ilut li**. l'lenhortrti 

ii lift- hiiliftiniiiry siiblecU 

■ ill ■•■■'■l 

Applv In wrlMpil. olftiBJ 

mil i hi ri' ulum ,v H ub anj 

mini i- ft mill iidilrnuM ol 

iiii. iirnli'Milumil refornee. 
tu si liuul «'•; rB'" 

< li'.tn s< hunJj. __ Brighton 


ttffij'ikiMj.TASiiaBr iiw 


DORSET 

Mil VANS run 6C1M.OL 

11 Iii nr 1 1 iii d- r ' 1 

iii' ul. m m- 1 " - <( - 1 

Hi id I'll 'i'an^.irli. 

!'r"i.i*wiii. s?*' u i. b JSSSSS 

nruup. I hr.. fc }| . r .ua,o!ir«« » 


li'llr * allii jiljJ U.; 

W‘a SiAWi? 

i iii, I'l'iiil.i "“‘ft, i^Minr to leirt*- 
i nl.' I- lur l | 1 " r J.i 1 i?M nraiwrad 

tt'.-'rw-'M .'x'v.w' 
rfw.".,. ■■'•"iJSjiei 


J' Piiwipi^ M( B f Betiwby, MA, Bgbf Grad. Cart.* Bfl., FB18 Geography ; 

I FULt iAc!JciES HI,<a „ ....^..1 


would be the ability to cearh 
French to 'O' _I"Vel and/ar 
. middle-school English. The 
total would bo equivalent tu u 
.makfmiitn of three dnyi per 

W *Burnham Scalo • salary do* 
pendent on hours. ^ 

■ Fleesa*. apply, with full e.v. 


VACANCIES 
SEPTEMBEB 1962 


. n 5"W- 

'LpKpON'NWa 


with rull e.v. 
i of two rn- 


IIAMFHIIIRE 

ST JfJIIN'H L pl l l-C.l, 

Hi ill I buna Him t, 1*CIS 30 w 
(071)3) 8151 IH. ^ 
h.Ci. IniloiMui'lhjl* Nr mini 
ROD liny s: 11 . In . . „ 

S um! lief nil ny Ihn llu In Hnllr 
rothiirv., , 

H/iriswr. . win . 1 TfaJM 


LONDON . . 

LATYMBR UPl'F.H HCIIQCIL 
King Street, Loniluu. Wft 9LR 
(Direct firant/iiiiinpuiiUont. 

Required ror " iWp tember 198* 
or January 1983 n ersiluete 
Mathemo Helen tu lin llnod Of 
(i 1 Department, ol 10 full Unt« 




iBH28L ,AMP9TEADHiaH 

3 Mar oaf ie Id Gardens ' 

Wanted for 'September, 19B3. 
wali-quallflsq graduate; to' 
teach. History throughout the 
school 1 up to Advanced und 
.university award level. ’ . 

Apply In wrllirto to Head. 

. mistress, enctoslnn testlroo- 

ti&xiUfflir . wr ■ .•nwR .:* 


ijf ?. p S r s I nr y" nSf niia m U |5r aVi^Jl 

iluB Londou. AlHiwance. 

: Applications in writing 
obetner with full curriculum 
'Tree and tile itumes of two 
Sferses Joi The Headmaster, 
atymar . Upper Htlioul, *«I"H 

tow* rondon ’ 


WILTSHIRE 

OODQLPMIN SCHOOL. 


cl' • *Tfie* vpcapcW 6 ar 9 5 iu$ fo.'fexpandkin withio the deparwianu | r 


An -ih^ope ndettl buerd I nu end 
day school ror 300 girls aqoil 

ftebulred for September «?•,* 


llAliBOaATK.- • i 

1 *. '..V N hfnt : PUBLIC > 

SiSSTfi mi % v iS n o?Sfr«fi 

fur n he V 

"Kirnm 1 ? fi&m ffSlfiS 

Xbce°st®«, 

COUNTY G° vHC £ h V 

: 

•• .JrSTS^S 1 -’ 


'Ap^iltc^donEhQUleft 
'o Mi arjo Ilfs najiie! 
.aoddeirnlb referte*. 


.V .i :v. ; " V # r ^ 


. uyosii \priUHd i . * OSBP-, MIIDI rsspif »■»,! r,’ *» ■ . , 

2B--fi:*£'iiN'Y "..lu ' liVaV’ ?• -V*ff ••r* IN'? ' V ■ ■ •'J»..J* W 


• - 1 ■ * « » ■ i i * ■. 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 

INDEPENDENT MATHS SURREY 

■ftintlnued EPSOM COLLEGE 


HERTFORDSHIRE 


SURREY “ 

SKS? t - OLLEOE 

incliidina 4 3 girlS? rm oi 290 


VVbII r».i li‘>. ,r,B 1 

BBDFOR D SCHOOL leach \Tam e ma t [cS r ."u r,,,Bl ° to 

RMUlrsd for Soplnmber I9B3. the schnol up ,I c *. ,, ? p ‘»Uflhoui 
Sr If necsssary from January pnrlenco n 0 *r A lowB ^ Ex- 
1983. a Qraduato tu tem-fi Anronimndatlon 1 
Mathsmetlcs LMEI SyMubuai single QRraan °A?!L abl “ for 


MBthsmetlcs (MSI Syllubuei 
ihreughout the sclionl, Includ- 
ing a Rood share of Sixth 
Form Work. An ability tn 
help »ftl lh «J*tre curricular 
activities would bi« a help. 

Bedford Sc liuul nnlary 

9c p l |!rther (Intnll* may bn 
obtained from i the llnnd Mm.. 
ter. Bedford Hi-hiiul. Uuruuliy 
Road, nodford School. Uur- 
naby whom apnllcntluit iliuiilU 
be made tonntlmr wllli rlntiills 
of quollflmtlulla nnd ntpril- 
ance, end the jinnies m iwn 
rafsroa*. (330161 1 83424 


RENT ■ 


COMBE BANK SCHOOL 
Siindrlapo, Nr. SuvmiaaKit. 

tester ham 637301 
Qlrls' Indopendniil S.-hunl 
Ope rull tlmo . uud aim part 
lima Mathnrnutlr* Tnnrhcr re- 
quired for Son t limber In uJuirn 
work to 'O level. 

Enqulrlns and iipnlb-utlunv 
to the Actlnn lloadinlstross . 
(384891 183482 


LONDON OT*" 

.STDUNSTAN'a COLLEGE nr t So^?r , o«IdaJi? n S hl . R *“idoSt 

Catrord. London, SEA 4TY AnDly in (hi ?- ost - , 

Independent H.M.C- - 830 ut tffe^ adinoi lh wi.w BBflm !* tp “" 

Day boy a if - 1 91 vltaaand ^ pl(ull, ‘ n 

Required for September 1982 ferancesf (4l?B7» f iKJVi 

■ graduate tnacher or *’ l ^‘ B TI 1836 IB 

Mathematics. Thera will be ■ 

opportunities for teaching the nil... a . 

lubieet at all levels. The no- UtltBr ASS fitailts 
pariment uses the MEI eylla- ^ooioiailia 

but and hae Its own campu- - 

tar. Assistance with extra- 1 

curricular activities a strong Rffti rryft M 

^commendation. Il la hoped nuLI un 

to appoint an oxnorlnncRU DOLTON BCHom 

teacher, but applUatlpnN from (Girls' Olvlilon) L 

newly qualified teacher, will Chorley Now Road naii n . 

be aerlously cpualdored. Own Lane*. DL1 4 PB ' Bolto " 1 

iBlanr scale, abuvn Inner Lull- 6B0 girls (203 Sixth Form. 

dan Burnham, rclatod tu quul- Mnnulred 

Klcatlona and nxperlnncr. 1982, Mans Brad 

Soma BSSlBtaiicB with rsmov. French *i "Sif ^ 1 «° 

•Ja sxpensaa and a funs rent Is- there In prsnsrlns ea n ?i?dL.i? 

iloQ ache mo are a valla bin. for Oxfnrdand t h,-?Jri d " lo 1 

written applicutluns. with 1 ra nc* “ft a ml nations' 0 nVIZ 

sm -sttai*" sw - 1 ' 1 i-™s!5s 

SSWlllSiffiL,., uJSi— Jiat,'* cD-ia; 


KENT 

8 E VENOaKh^scr Oql 

*900 pupil,] 

Srww»iJBF« S5|feS"';;s 

,8SJM Sa’SnfiSW 

HolJdmS,?Ir rlr WiJhE 4,««Ms. 

Modern Languages . Sc tn°!i 

— a 11 «ai3Si. l TSta 7 a> s "/SgS'iS 

Heads of Department 

LONDON 8.E.8 

WEST SUSSEX H)§2 1 lr a d FRENCH ®»»*«n«ber. 

P*ARK ICHAELS BU «TON th C e lSB^ ,bl t \ P '5L3 a, S 

SttesriSi 

SgSglSL S S&5BSM%BS 

'W 63 ' l£ffi 


LONDON S.E.8 

French fjBtwnber. 

For IDDlln.'l— 


LONDON 


SURREY 

notrh dame convent 

'JL.-iSS.? 

London™ frin C oo° bnnern 2 P,UB 
SURREY 

mm®# 

Music 

Heads of Department 

KENT 

WEST HEALTH SCHOOL 
or ►£ BP ! SiV tomb er 1 B 82 


fo7 r OxrnrS r " D S r JP B °i Br, ^ ,,t °" 

.J!.??™™ o"'* Cambridge an- 

rvnui^ . 'irtUlnallDiM. B New 
orsle! 1 wotoome. Burnham 

iril 1 . 00 " 0 “P p'F to Haadmla- 
kr««s. enclosing C.V. and 


ancUjgfng C^V. and 
namos of (wo refersaa. (Nn 
forms). (3B830I iBaknS 


LONDON 

KnSNttN HIOII SCHOOL 
N’ 4 W P ? n0 8troB,1 L^siltlon 

Ji*=.J a 93 42 ®< 

(Roll 300 nlrls 11-18) 


CHESTER 

Jife 6 -,^ 0 8 8Ctl ° OL 

psaBUV n «IK r BMS d 12 

tyach trench and German to 
S c M°l Hr 4hIp level. 
^V'1'7 *«• help with out of 
si.li.inl ai'tlvitioB, purtloularlv 

[id vim nan a rowlnDl will bt an 


fRoll 300 nlrls 1 1 . 1 R» f*!*,™ 0 " “ r rowing, will ba an 

Ah„ enthusluBtU 1 roniini-cufiii 1 

well nualiried riill -1 lim. , Applications, with names of 
gather i. required ™»? i? v . u ,/‘ ,r ? ron “ i Immedlnteiy to 
!fSTHV 3 i 5 r r 2 T.^S Ha . ,u Irncl] 11,0 Mcnrtinnstor. (44514) 

B m. 1 ! .v?-..svii — 

BQnT U0B8ET 

E«KK!SiHSS? OL 

■nd axui«*.f M.~ d JiL * , bilUnu*i Wlnkton. Christchurch 

ton! of 'L-. Si'hiKjI's re- H«nu l red rur Seutomber. 

Uh, V. 1*5« , "S'*| 1 Jfif'il »■"; i’®* by an Independent Boys 1 

**AZ9L.-* * ,, “ 1 RUpui' a r r5fi?L r |?n X i m T Q ^&H 4 ^ 

i" 1 ' l, » | :«»i»- S* r l/M^NCll to 'O' and 'T? 
IM ImpK' 11 !? 1 . /HI' 1 rnwai'il. level. 

■tmv M i "I vlMtnnmnt. A Apply in writing wllh currl* 


SBSTrtnrSl. «”* r "'~"»». 


SKBf °Eh “»! «° “«ch 
[f? to**.' entr‘ 

somB lB G«r«^ l,,1Ity to l « BC h 
taJS? C»rman an advan- 

Funhei 1 details of the 
52 ?*, “ nd °t conditions of 
rSm . 1 ,. u - b 5 obtained 
*he Headman ter to 
whom applications! with 
or two refarees, 
should be sent as soon ■■ 

Vldl? lh, 3v f « lao prS! 

numbori* yt,mB ,elHphono 

«* onaon >w, TbIBi 


NOTTINGHAM 

NOTTINGHAM HI OH 

G?P.D?iT. R RLB 

a *L l' B Beptembari Hon- 
* n German, to 
inulF “P *° Advsncod 

irioJ^.. Sob, L f ’ I . ary French on 

f. ot «■««“'• 

AjPP'ft 1,1 writing with b.b.b. 
Diving Curriculum vitae end 

[q roM 5-e.3 r ,w SiJ SBK“ *8 

tsnmMnMMHi 


PERTHSHIRE 

RANNOCK SCHOOL ' 

{.“HM f S - i 40 boye,. ecaeptlnp. 


bo 

r ku Pmn 8 »lt55 i, Bn5* t fhe^*Bin?£g 

Other Assistants 

EAST 8USSEX 


HARROGATE 

COLLEGE 

,r acEc«S 0 ^X public 

OOL FOR OIRLB 

(4S0, mainly boardinai 

I9Ba qi, o^“ d »iS p 8 »P*»mhBr t 

Kv!-‘£ vasS'-TAriFL 
ft™, -"“a" ..a 1 ., ssa a iw 

kem?hlnqf BC A n Seale 1 " a"?!' 

SJJMIK 1 .. ■" a l-rliwa 

ringEa'WBtJ'nSB 

Ho «drnls,reea, Harm- 

^ H-rVoD-tf 1 -^? 

an> l £° m - p M^ 

- 1B4024 - 

OXFORD 

b?r ^BB 2 ror 0, K u f- r ,y Septem- 

fe°-cr.":p^ri?rr2d? , “ n * p °rlence. 
lum P vitUB , °BnH VV,th 

Ssrasr JWrJSistv 

fe""? ■ He adln ato n Mill, o». 

ftEhw™ 1 &Ktord teSL 

SURREY 

HE”Xf NT OF ™ B SACRED 
^ddinpiium. Surrey, CR3 

fs?is?a d f ?■ ^ b firar« ■ choo, 

Emchfif^f . Si^^SaffoVai 'rT 
eponslblHty rbr l S y w 

nnta b mir.r i?. duties. Appii? 

muat ba araduate with 
aeries •»g» 1 «rU'«Hon and i*. 

P a 22?5* . Bu r"h(itij Soolo 2. 

M APPly . In writing tu the 
v*l tol^n d" nV™ w tfl ^ urrlc dlum 


LONDON 

Crownedalo Road London 

ad w aiUngo 1 .' 0 ” B ' BUbJecl «n 

rafaraaal h 2t "“TiSf ° r J' VQ 

eddreae. (4904 1 1 l . h " , S*SSS 


MIDDLESEX 

Ha.mpton sciiool 

BS ° ’ 

stisa ir^zur aiv* 

J* pigpkon Allowances 

Further Inror met Ion available, 
ppllca t Ions with rull cur. 
v **“ “iid namaa of 
ter i a I h 5 Headmee- 

wnrih l,am E»5SU School, Hon- 
M?ddx. , Tm^HD. 


NEWCASTLE 

RPM Tyne NB9 4DX * 
Wonted for Soptcrmbor 1983 

iSSmA I'KMifiK » 

(rnm l »I.J , !? Bl !? ar< * ■VtUldble 

imIu?!.. Headmaster to wiiom 
vFtaa C in3 B Ih^* ,h curriculum 

vitae and the iiamsfl of iwbi 
sente" 

MkafC UPPDill t menl | s 

""■for \a.5? jmt f 


W'»P C learn Music from 
the ag a pf a upward* end to 
teach piano and strings. A 

Sh5VfiL" l «-*.ft Pi * n,at w, lli ’ some 

Bchpoi n a°Uv"flBs , . t * n ° th ” r 


WOLVERHAMPTON YORKSUIRE 


w ,AppW to tha Headmattar 
C.V .and namaa of two 
referees. (333261 • 183824 


WOI ’ v ^^.Y PTON 

FRENCH AND OIRLS P^E. 


GLOUCESTERSHIRE 


0,1 r la I BBS) 
Toachor or 


Ji.ai.-nar oi rttiNCH required 
|ep tent bar with 1 aubsldlary 
Eiisileh. German or Spanlah- 
Full participation required 


HAMPSHIRE 

8AL8SIAN COLLOB 
E“™borough, Hsmpahlro 

cEacher°*to tok« |SJ^. b ,Kiu5 

&rMf" depB,,d( n t 

Ap>y rc t h o u fh% i«ari!afc 

?r n . D nd"°n C S3, d a, ^^^(er^ 

sal? fi a A t aft r ,UIt,,tttw »8S8ff4 

KENT ' 


c hor required 

hi or January to 

£"«?“■« tutor for sine 


GATEWAYS SCHOOL 
Harawdad, Lesds, rgiT ni d 

A fl ?u1| r v* d tralnfrf P I*5 bBr ^ 8Ba i 

faP'zJIT*- «.~s-"Si 2 Si 
SSSj;. 


HoardTno Ho“^e ‘£ r 
Thte'i* «* n a d c.i2 ,r i U pae“tT B9 ' 

ve r b am p ton" *w l*t h 8 cu rrtci^ 

(IffuSi *“ -?s%v* 


Religious Education 
Other Assistants - 


OF VIOLIN Tor two teP 
POEjIblllty of . part-tl 


MARLBOROUGH 


CHER 

^ terjds. 

iCv-Sy.: ,|S - 

poaa(b) a. Burnham Scale 
In M P cu rNcS tun ^ vitae* ’'end 

rmv T ) of two — ftsaass 

SURREY 

CROHAM HURST SCHOOL 
South Croydon. Surrey 
independent Publto Da 
School of 530 girls. 

Required .Igr ■ September 
teacher of 'CELLO for aprax 
Imetely one day ■ week.. 

Apply in writing with curri- 
culum vitae and namaa and 
ddr«s*e» of two referees to 
i HeadmletreH, 79, Croham 

&aa«R gfQydDO i«^3 

WEST SUSSEX 

8^. r ^ 4ICHAELS pURTON 

Patworth 

J Independent Boarding Bahdol 
or- 240 plrla under the 

Wnnrl.ivf rVtmnpiHnn' “ 


wtth teklncr c 
nclucj- voloDlnn thfl 
*11,9 rrmirit. aim with bucdosb- hont rroe 

SUlKlFMISSTavSi: 

t mini ii ii un e firm fimlliiH. tlm nuiainr , Bqm 
It Mill-Ill) (J 


ftiKTIff 

Jwjtll Mirrlrii 

1 ..Polleue. W|||. 

m 


curriculum vitae 


Jirnxijnt " i»’'»n dim iln i a □ n li a} n n OB-SIb Pn 33 


-I— M.-m ..III. nii.M.IIIUIIU III. Hi 

yiinraiitiiiia q Hchln It post. 
Thu ■rliiiiil wuuM wfllrtimo 
aiiiiin.inn iifforiilli a raiigo «r 
nytrn I'urrljuilni 1 nkllls (eena- 
y ruwlnu cnnelilng) but 
uai'niiiiiuiit requirement Is 
-nr en experleucml uml enthu* 
a I unit: llnaiilat. Ennulrlea and 
nihil U ut Inna with iiii man. 

"(lilrANana anil lelephone hiim* 
ore uf 2 rarnrana) to tlio 
leniliiiaater. WyrUrfn Collage, 
lliinniinuen, runs, Tel: stone- 
Inman (043 3B9) 2432. 


ereoe to tha Hend- 
annoch School, Han- 
rthahlra, .or phona 

“ a - for nm* 


SHROPSHIRE 

.VYnEKIN COLLEGE 


Inman 
14 43891 

HARROW 


^pDLESKX 

Taylor h 

Hiulru) - 1 


a lander d, who would be ore* 

B ared to .lake a full part In 
ia llfo of the achool. Acoora- 
modatlon avalluble for single 
or married person. Salary 
above Burnham. . . 11 

® Applications should be 
sde to the Headmaster. , 
re it In College,. Wellington.. 
Telford, Shropshire, giving 

abifr - * or ,wo tja , 4 


Physical Education 
Other Assistants 


BERKSHIRE 

reading blub coat ' 

SCHOOL ’ 

Holme Pork . Sonnlnn, Barks. 


LONDON E17 


FOR 

hmci Yaps 

Graduate re 


00 boys 1 ( 


-S3 

, anCSc 


Divinity. 
.2 and 


. ahouid be a«m.wiB 
weekday aftarnoona and 

3aturday morntnsa to teach/ 
(aacfi oamaa ivith epaolellaa- 
lon In one or inora of tha 
nejor gamaa, I. a. Rugby 8oc> 
er AftiUJUc*. if subject end 
^•lincauone suit, tfma table 
:ouid involve some cl a aa room 
eachlns in addition. 

Applfcatlana with C.V. to 
lead m eater. C43B96) IB 4224 


H , 2 . Bnd 3. Poaxlbultv of 
V 1I J? r *3 educated at 

third fees. Hoping - Foraat 
™ *n». warden aroni 

^?,fb?e U . r f!i?^4 , ^ farm ^0 O 4 n 41^ 


•'i / '• 




:ir£v :< 


S£ f v >; 

isnout , tha School to a !’ 


CUMBRIA 

LAKE DISTRICT 


SURREY 

ScfiS^ aRA « MAR 
I?d oiliSr aehoa ‘ • a «° «*»ra 

re- 

qulred for September tor 


mence a apta. 

tljrorf ehorfng ^e* 
aponelb|Uty_ far ,P.B. end 
gemea. for 7- U ego range. - 

epdly’to Head meat or 
with e.v,. together with 


!3;A%iete"5i • 

p tomb or, 1992. 
of three ehorlng 


S ulred for Septembb.- ,» or 
an uur y If nacataaryi. Sur- 
ah am Scale post according to 


jjSvoN , . 

/ ° 1 ^ 1 s m b » r 1SB2, 

UP to 


KENT 

BENENDFN SCHOOL 

required for flop telpher, 18M 
a Univeraliy Graduate to 
ahere the . leeching of 

FRENCH llirouohout fhe 

School tp unlvaraltv Bnir*nee 

Levol. Ability to help “‘*k 
Sermon trashing would, 


wards Graduate. Teepneri'or 

usfiii&z scssr .AfcSB ; 

school to "O end poeflbly A 
level. ... 


puBi or luu-pma corpoinaa 
with another teaching sub- 
ject. 

Apply to the Heedmletrage 
et the school with curriculum 

ffiftamwii*' a nwB 

6th Form.- ' 

Boarding & DaY puplli) - - 

S nd Fhyeloal ' -Educeltdn/ 

Bmea. • ’, 

The . . appointed candidete 


experience, 

vi tae” with nine tOrSBfiS. 

bfeneS r ?SVd2 d 9 0 , l,,,7i WEB 1 


e.v,, tog. 

i.r(kmr 


Applications bj 
fall mrrleulun 
neniae end add 
referees; to thi 


LLANDOVERY COLLEGE 

H.MiC. 270 pupils 


. ft.- , 




! U '■ ;X 

■ '• r. :v,i 

\¥-H 
i I 

i>- 

- t'. - n 


IreBBBB of two 


K",' ia lop the tradltlone ■ of ■■tpe 

sirw;- safeto araww 


W¥mm 


Pastoral 

Other Assistants 


LONDON ' " S. 

NORTH BIirUOE HOIIBK 1 


SUFFOLK ... ; 

tgaguvegi*^. 

8 af°(&ro C078TJ 278 131. 


BRISTOL 


IG^ SCHOOL . 

-.-.s.'fbr junior 

buae o' L — 


r junior 


oher to O 
r September 


CHAPLAIN 

Appiipatiops! are. invited for the Chaplaincy of - 
Llandovery Colldge for Septembflr1982. V* 

. Applipant must; Im:' a graduate, of a British ( \ 
university, ordained Into jhe Anglican Church and 1 
able td teach Religious Studies St all levels up to ! 
; ! A'ievel. ' : «; 

Apply gWlhB cilrrlOulupi vlfae and names of V 
two referees to: Dr R. Brinley Jones, Warden r 
Llandovery College, Llandovery, Dyfod, from ; 
whom further pSitfoulars may be obtained, : : 


f d p.m-. or j 

HoedmD«tor. I 


■•aa of ftftft® 







74 


1 11* I1MKS KIHI( 


- _ ^ 1 | ( >NAt SUPPI ‘EMEKr 21.5.82 


INDEPENDENT 

EDUCATION 


Science 

Heads of Department 


CROYDON 

THE am l 1 A LACE BOinOL 

630 qlrln, Direct Grant/ 

In depend mil 

Hunaun nruduiiir to be I, rail 
or I'liyaLr*. Till! Is « now 
post. Tho School lias n nl mini 
sclouco unii molhontnt lea Slain 
Form. An Iniorrii In dcvi-ltip- 
Inil uii ul net ron Ir* I'oiirin 

Would In* UIUM-CK fut«(l. h<nln 

ApnllL'Dlluiin VI nil . till' 
n a i iinn of twn role runs mIi ■>■■ III 
be iient Ui llin II enil mistress. 
Old Palace School, Olil Pnlmn 
noail. Croydon CHO I AX. 
(3803*1 184B1H 


Other Assistants 


BERKSHIRE 

ETON COLLEOE 

PHYSICIST ranulroil In 
bnptnmbnr tn tixii li 

thrunrihout the bl-IiiiiiI. 
Tlilt Is ii tnnifMirarv 
appointment for nnn tni-m 
only lu nnn bio u iiiuetnr u» 
tnkn nubUntlLiii Irani. 
Accommodation nvnllnbln. 

Applies Ilona, inclinJlnn 
curriculum vltoo and the 
names, addresses and tele- 
phone numbers of three 
referees, should bu sent to 

a e Head Msitor. Eton 
illafla, Windsor. Berk- 
shire. from whom rvrthar 
Un Calls fnay be obtolnnd. 
>381111 184834 

BERKSHIRE 

Lsmbrook. Wlnkflold now. 
Dracknslli Berkshire RGI2 

ecu. . 


nequirsU for Naptsmbar 1988. 
or January 1003. teacher ta 
taka Middle School Science 


and Maths with tha phaalbll- 
lly ur more senior teaching In 
the future. Soma experience 
of Bourdlnu School Lire would 
be sn advantage tint! ability tn 
coscli tup level Demos a ne- 
cessity. Excellent occnmmndn- 
llon either married nr slnnlu 
la svalluble. A temporary 
appointment mlaht be ennst- 
aoroil. Salary approximates to 
Burnham Beale fl, 

Write with C.V. end names 
of two recant referees to the 
Headmaster. (43884) 184884 


BERKSHIRE 

PRIOR ‘B COURT 
ChlnvaLey. Newbury, 

ririlfi j Ur ° V ,ao of 


Science. t« 

KSHilS'S 


clioal of King# wood. 

learliar required In 
ir. Ability to tuarh 


Nurrield Hclfliira to Common 
Bntrunre level. Ton form Kii- 
M 1 1 nli (lieu available lo the 
right cnrdldetn. . hut not 
esaoutlal. An anility to ranch 
runhy n raroinmaiidntjun. 


Si. 


(ivallubln. 

3 plus o 
l Iowa lice, 
is Headman- 
mas ur two 
'• Court. 


CANTERBURY 


vlW 


m 



ESSEX 

noM 11 : 1.11 sniooi , 

IlnKli.iul. Eshi-x turn i pi 

Illii l<(h>. 8.1ft J I-1I H. 

Itriiulrrd lur hrptemlirr 
.1 iinikl irti’il reside ill stnoli 

tciiiiirr Ilf 111 - 111 'rrtl hlllt In t** In 
Mtil.lli- Silnml. AnalMilllt'i 1 


with snort uml.’iir SniutliiM l» 
hi'ipiiif. nurnliHni sruif l. 
Apply In writ Inn to ini' 


llruilmnwlwr. qlvlui, name* noil 
d<hli-i>p.Mi<H nf l««i rot nwh. 

I 4430 I ) 184884 

HERTFORDSHIRE 

ST. MAHnAIILT'S SCHOOL 
HuUiry. Watfnrd. 1VIJS ll»T 
ntiarilmu St haul far AAO nirli. 

Itaunlrml lor Srplnnlirr. a 
iirndiinii' In li’hfli Chrmlsirv 
t ikl I - 1 1 isii* liia-liidliiii nxnnilnn- 
I Ima wurk rtt Ull IkipIh. A 
mnli* |io*l nvullnhln lor n mill- 
■i l>l y ■■aiierlcncc'd t nil, 11 , lull* 
Apply In writ Inn with twn 
■- avl i»i , (Mli‘PS in rim llnaiillilln- 
trcsH. M. Mnrunrcfs Silunil. 
Hush ii v, llnrli Wl»3 HIT. 
(4371141 1H4H34 

LANCAHIIIIIE 

IIUUV GKAMMAII HflKlOI. 

IGIRLSI 

llrlilQft Ituutl. Bury. 

Lancashire. Bl-9 (fllll. 

Induce intent — Ex nirnti 
Grant Srhnnl 

Main School 300 Sixth t-nrm 
160. 

Required In Bnuteiiibiir. qual- 
ified and preferably expert, 
anted oraduatole) for i*ari- 
tlmn help with Chemistry. 
I'll vslrs. mid .liiulnr Sa liinrn. 
Dnrnliuiii Hi nln 1 . 

Pliiiasr n|i|i|v allrrcl In tl,n 
lieu dm 1 * 1 cm at tlin n IiimiI 
Willi r urrl cillli in vllnii mill 
iinm ■<" (if (wii profi'nsluniit re. 
ferree. <386361 184824 

LONDON, S.E.3 

Required lur Septonibor. 

1988, u PHYSICS leather tu 
be responsible for tha snbjeri 
up to o and A lovoi in a small 
Independent Hay and Board* 
Ina School for Boys. Applied 
Maths (or Form VI would bo 
Bn advantage. 

Fur application Form con* 
tact tha Principal's Secretary 
at Christ's Collage. Black- 
heath. London S.E.3. (01-898 
00921. (336231 184884 


application Form con< 
a Principal's Sacra lory 
Plot's Collage. Black- 


LONDON 

THE NORTH LONRON 


COLLEGIATE SCHOOL 
Wanted for fioptenibur. 1982. 
wall quoliriail nraduntn 1 ‘hyal- 
clsi tn leach fliruuiihnut the 
ectmol in Nuffield Advanced 


NOTTINGHAM 
Ni * I flNtillAM llll. II 
iCIIOOL t (lit i.IltO 
IS I’.H.h.T 

lti-i|li,i I'd I < It- Ik-1 

I i ill li.-r <>l I'lnalii U< slim i 
I lie W m-k III -I ill'liill lull, in m 
lliri'f ■mil In Inn Ii up In A 
level mill Opi'ii *■■ In i In r shin 
stiaiuliiril l.iiriH- mill well- 
ri|ulli|»-d Si-h-lta-e |1r|in, Intent 
Hu riilin.ni Soili* '.I. but ' mull- 
•i.itcA scvhinu ii llrsl niiiioiut- 
mi’iil will tlllta lu» »tiii»lili*i-i'd. 

A puly III » rltlim nltll 
x.ii.p.. mii loi inn i urrli iiIiiiii 
vlt.lc ii nd nililrmana ul l«o 
referees lu thi' llrinl Mis. 
tri'sn, H Arboretum Mrrrt. 
Nut IhiillaniH NCi 1 4jn. (4flnSftl 
1 IHH-!I 

OXFORD 

I1VI-. XT ANTHONY' htTIHUI. 
Ht-iliilrml Srpii'iiilirr 1 1182 
Iil-iii1ll.llc In lllOliOO V/( .111' ■ 
MISTIIY lu laini-li up lu A 
Irviil Itlnliiiiy mill Mldilh- 
Si-miii| Plivsli (tl Hclnnrr. Itnnl. 
■ Inn punt hilt iiiill-rralih'iil 
inns 111 car'll. It. I'. |irrfrrrml. 

A ii id l in ( I mis with i-iii'rli-u. 
linn rlino ami nninen uml 
nililrnani*n (witli lull* iiliitur 
■iiinilicrel id 2 refri'ri's tn: 
rim llrodmlNtrcss. Ilyn (tl 
Anthiiny Srliuul, Till Inin 
Lunn. Ilendliuitiin Hill, 
Onfuril. Tel: Oxford A3H0’J. 

(384)0) t B4H2 4 


SOMEUSKT 

BRUTON SCHOOL FOR 

oiru.s 

Hiinuv Hill. Da'idnu. Hnitinrx<-l 
HA I n n N T 

drill r-pi.|aii«.|it . *ao ulrlx. 
llinirdlaifi nml l)uv) 
llriiuirnd fur Sridrinlii'i' I 'IliU 
CIII'.MLhTHV (iHAllllA IT. in 
t imrli llariuiiitniiit tlin hrlmul 
ua sei-onil in (liiiiiirtiiieiil . () 
mid A level Chemistry unit 
Middle -St-liunl Oonorol fie Ir li- 
ce. Durnliam Bcata I oirnrliin 

r iiocl experience. Acconimadti- 
luit available lor slngla 
woman teacher. 

Apply tu Head Mistress 
with curriculum vilao and 
names of (wo refareas. Furth- 
er details available (s.a.a, 
appreciated). (4832?) 184824 


SOUTHAMPTON 

KINO 6 D WARD VI SCHOOL 
SoulliBinplon 

(IIMC: 840 boyi; 050 In Sixth 
HEoUlREU FOR BF.PTKM- 


wall qua 1 1 (I ail nraduntn 1 ‘hyal 
clxt tn taarh fhruuuhnut tin 


lave I and a ahuro of Helm- 
lamhlp teach Inti. Settle II 
PURL . 

Application by lettnr with 
curriculum vttue and nnmoi of 
(wo reforoaa. qlvliio a day- 
time telephnaiD number. ns 
anon an poaalble tu Tho Head 
Mlatraas. Tha North London 
Callanlate School. Cbdoim, 
Edawara. Middlesex. 

(indepondant School — 
formerly Direct Orant — BOD 
Pupils) (384761 184883 

LONDON 

Roqulrud in fioptombor In a 
sum 1 1 Iiulapandont School fur 
nirln. teecltsr for Intenrntad 
oclmirn and Humun Bluluuy tn 
O-lnvial. Knllnn Broadway 

?iS3-Bot A,,n,y 


JHMR: 840 boyi: 830 In Sixth 

G fpUlRED FOR 8F.PTKM- 
ER. 1088: a teacliar uf CIIE- 
MIHTrv. Scale 1 punt. Mod- 
ern taoil laboratories will bo 
ready for use Hcplnmhor. 
1982. 

Full particulars from lha 
ilaud Muster. Mr CL Dolinin, 
Ul the school, Kollet Ruud 
fiuulha m plan . 809 3FP. tu 

whom anpllcatlona (no funnel 
should ba lent, toflather with 
the names and addresses of 
two raf areas, lo reach the 

Siii" Boon ■■ nml b 


W, YORKB 

V^tBFIELD GIRLS’ HIGH 
npqulraal . Ill Hnutombor 19 


LONDON 


Girl's Fubllo D.oy School 

Ss'sf.w e,Kn "- 

Raqulrnd for Septambar 1 9 82 
graduate to alva pnrt-tline or 
pbseibty full-time help. . in. tha 
tqaahlnq of 'A' leVol' PHY- 


PHYSICIST lo laobh tu Uiil- 
vn rally on I ranee level In a 
school with n atronn science 
Rlxth Form. Benia ncciirdlnn 
tn quulHlcstlons and oxpsrl. 
ones, a 

R'iU 


oa^. Eallno. 
September 1982 


required for Sbptember, '1088 

wwgrit 

B ust nlju be. nule to offer ‘A* 
•vel • Chemistry. . . Experience 

R t ■ .Mmenlno. ovorsaes students 
i highly dan treble, but ‘not 
essenTlql. . Aovojnmodetlun 
may bo availablu for a suit. 

"^Srtnsuer with run 

f urrlculum^yltuo and two rq. 
eroot. to i The Principal. Stef- 
retrd l luuije Tutorial Cqltnoa, 

CAMBR1DOE8HIRE 

tlro3 a *fDr 1 * 0 iepini)ibor, 
si or or ml»trnis to 

.. „ fl' tavef* afillRv /a qaefet 
with Junior P|ivMesl Boleneo 

a fi t a* 1 **2 PA sr* 0 1 ajr ° V J n” ,9 j 

so cony appafntnienlt ability 
o cdoch gnntnt an aavadlnan 
alar^.in occordb ttoe .with th 

Hill 
to, 
tits 

PIS 


a nohlnq of 'A' aval -PHY- 
cs. Now Ihboratory block. 

■ Apply, ns anon as vosalble 
With full- particulars, .giving 
curriculum- - vltne . end the 
nunies or two refernoa to tlin 

ISSW 1 ™" al li, ° Ifim 


.WARWICKSHIRE 

PRlNCBTHOftPE CpI.LBa 
Boys' R. C. Iiidependent 


LONDON 

gOllTIl HAMPSTEAD HIGH 

PoppWi 

K.&riiw Q “ ra ”"'' 


Wnuled for Baptoinbor, 1988. 
gtixnun toucher far IntBprntuu 
Soloncn . courses In' the first 
end second year. 8 parlous 
per week, an two days. 

Apply In w.rltliin to |Iaad« 
mint reus". oneloHlun. .(uetlinQ. 

wrih'W'Uisrcw. Rfnte. ,a - 

184824 


{SKt'&V-W* ol 

90 boys in the Sixth J Form . 
naoulrad for . Soptnmbur 

iMfi: CI1EM18THY, AND 

PllYBlOfl - A suitably qunl- 
Hlaii orsduate to almra In tlis 
tneohlnii or; Chemistry and 
Pliyslca tu O and A level.. 

This can bo a first npuolnt- 
mont. salary to □iiruhiiiii and 

f 'Mporloncn. Opportunities fur 
itvofvameiit In extra-oiirrlau* 
ur aotivltlOH. 

, Apiiltcallone. with aiirrlcii; 
him vitae and ths name uf 
two referees, to the llnHilmes- 

iS^otfiSi 1,10 • Uv * a V«W 4 


MANCHESTER 


PpllCstlOm 
i. honours 
Ct to teach 



«.wa 

end Integrated Physloer Sglen. 
eas. to • junior . rorms. Scsla I 
and - 8 according to qusliriea. 
Ilona ind •xoqrlsnce.. 

Apply Immealatsly by letter 
with ■ c.V. end names.. ol re- 

-TMl: 


G 0 SFIELD SCHOOL 
Nr. Halstead, EssexCOSIPF, 

; ' ' An Independent boarding achpol wlih 1 30 boya, 

, t eatabltehed Ini 02flanda registered edLiceflonal charity.- 

■ MASTER/MISTRESS 

. . Required fbr-Sep|ember 10^2 1 ''/. ! ■ ■ ' , :■ 

l . Applicanta a^ouid Hava teaofilng quaWteaMCns and a degree.' 

: 1 orfllerabty lo Physios and Chamtetry and piWatably be maided. . 




' Independent education an advantage. . , ■ 

• Salary by arrangament, but not lees than Burnham Boats. $Uda 
Stipdra/invadod Sdheme and good prospaefe tor promotion for 
. rtont appliftant,' *' *■ • • ' 

This Is a bountry school standing fn a hundred acre estate; ; 
A:$chool house la pfowWed; 'V. • 

Appllcatldne' should be mads |o the Chdltwah of ^He ' 
Governors with references. * ; ’ 'V.-ij.; 

• ' ' * • - I - ~L 


Technical Studies 
Other Assistants 


<tl.nUCKSTKUHIIIUK 

imnuiN xi-iioni. 

Full 1.1111(1. Ilii'llH-V. 

Tow koxhui'% . (tliM. 

ToIkiiIkih**. fi-wko«liurv 

Ili*t(l'*t I II (I mi In ■(• I (ur (■■■(•i. WO 

K ill'll* ( It - Ml lilB „ 

oiiulrrii lor Soittr inlior IUH4 
n viuiiiu woll.iiiinltfloil (ort* lior 
nl (.'rail lu ummiml imilii 1% In 
(ho Irm lilim ul Wiuiilwi ir k 
mill Molalwiil'k In (lie low rr 
for m* wllli muni' ini olkonir ill 
lu ullior iiuirmns lur iimro 
mpitlor I'lliilln. rim ilr |iil( I illoiil 
hum four <!rn(l mi'ri Inllmim 
w iirMnii in iiuri'iimr. limit 
Im-illtlom. 

A Ill«*a1 imml m Ini' a (ll ml 
iil>|<uliiliin*ni. but ullmr npi'li- 
i mum firi' wuli iiiur . Invulip- 
iiinnl In i-rml(loiitlal ilulirn 
omi'iitlal. Iliu lir lur ai i mu - 
iiiinlnlliiii uvallnlili'. 

Salnry Uurnhiiui Sriilo I anil 
Biilicrnmiiintliin. 

Aniilli-atiuu and curli ilium 
vitae wllli iiiimom itml nifilro*- 
xen mid lelo|ilioun iiiimhern ul 
two rnlTCM lu lleailmamter 
Immedlalsly. 1332.301 1H3424 

SOUTHAMPTON 

KING 1.11 (VA II ll V! Sl llOdl. 
kuiillm iiiiuiin 

(IIMC: H4(l Hoy x; 230 111 Nlxth 
Kuril! I 

Rlllil'IRK.II roii sr.PTF.M- 
IH'.R. 1982: a yuiuni well- 

qiiutlflml tnm her lur DESIGN 
uml Tl-:c.-|iNui.(Hiv. Atm ii y 
lu teurli siimn liniliir 
MathnmatU-s tin Ailvniiiauo. 
The itunun nppolulnil will lie 
expncinU tn runtrlhuta tn the 
planning uf thn mpunxluii nf 
ilio Department and itn in- 
tegration with budi the artis- 
tic and tachnological uutlvitlen 
in the School. 

Full particulars from the 
Head Master. Mr. C. Dobauti. 
at the School, Kallat Roud. 
Southampton 809 3FP. tu 
wham applications (no forme! 
should bo sent, tonothar wllli 
tho namn ana uddrosnes of 
two rnforraa to rnach lha 
School am soon an pnanihla. 
(38288) 188484 


Other than by Subject 
Classification 


Other Assistants 


BERKSHIRE 

ETON COLLEGE 

pen 19B2 or j mm 
1083 1 ox no rf cured toaclier 
With enocliil interest In 


LONDON 

KINi. -M I 1(1 ii >-i S|i ii a| 

Nuilli 1 ml | Mini. in 

N IV II .'IIS 

!*■ uuiml in ''ri'lruil.r i . I'lHi 1 

1.1 till* nil mir •■■ rilutnlluii.il 

■ Iny Iliu. | . 

1 A full I mu- rk|irl Irm nl 
■Vil tnii lu-r will, |.miu*i-|eii, ■» 
111 iil iPit mol I nlirli |*i ln« Inn 
■mil f.i-ilrul A, I lu loin .i 
Iritin ul llitfr. 

'.! All i'liii'tlniiir.1. lull- 
llmr i-eiiirillnl lrm|ir r mull- 
elite niuill. mil i uiilil Ink.' ir- 
n|iui|m|l.||l(\ |,<t iiriinn Imal It'll 

ui III'* ilrp.irt, m-iit 

3. An I'mi.rl'lrilt rtl. I'tir I - 

(line 1 «■ ul | ml t InulliT lu '<!' 
Ir * el . 

l'lr.imr itpiUy III Wllli, III In 
(lie II rriil. eni lilmlli t, Iwtl 
mUlinuril me I . mill re mm nil r>„- 

vrlulieB. fur apuln alluil fur in 

111. 1 iilimu S. xlr n„il Giiir, 
I.UMilu,, A llu W run r ,443131 

I ll1ft-.'.4 


LONDON 

InfNiita nml lemlirrm 

rr, ini,- ml l,.,„i Hrpir nil.r r . |..r 
I'rliiiir Siliuui i„ ■■.,1.11111 
Nlft. lei. mm.Hftl’,1. (3M4HuV > 

1 H fifty 4 


SURREY 

NOVVl.K l.lil)i,l SI * IKK II. 
Renulre.l in Sep,p„i|>er . a 

i|iuiHriril milt riilliiimliuitli- 

leiif her fur . ( .ruul null v HP lu 
( I.. mill I' h.x. Imel. mill 

luiilur K rein It (aqen Rll-lni in 
I . A I X. ilnv I', p|inrnliir> 

Silmul. A I, llll v 111 (immlnl Wllli 
timnem anil exlra-< urrli ulnr 
nrttvitlr* an advmilrttln. Snlary 
Bi trill, an, fp-nlr. 

Apply wf l It C.V. nml the 
name* uf 2 rnfereem tu the 
llemlmanicr. Niiwer l.tnlge 
Niltnol, (iililhurhiiiir l.mir. 
Durklnu hurrey. <47AH7i 

189624 


WMT SUSSEX . Ma«tnr(>MI|. 
trnmmen/Mul rutta ret, nlrlin, 

C oals In llnlepniiilenl 

rliunls aim, ild iinplv with 
m. a.o. envclii|Ht i>, fie,-. I'uul 
blarrinudean Hoail. 
jyi | lilli , h ,|r » | . tV. fit, minx, 

(2ft(l2 1 I IH9A24 


Preparatory Schools 


Headships 


ESBEX 

LOYOLA FREPARATORY 

Dnt-kliurml Hill. K,«*p* 

(8UU buys a, mil 8 • 1 1 1 
The (invermu-a uf llll* l.'uiltu. 
Ilr iliiy.wrliiHil invlln nnplli it- 
l hull (ur tlin ffi:AI)filllF. 
Wltll n view III tlin punt hellPI 
ink, ill nil III Septemluir I MM3 
or January MIR.V fiulnry. Bur- 
nliain Hculn luruup 41 wlih 
fnnilly . n<-< uinimiilnilnn m,|i. 
p I lull . I.iiynln NrhliPl In nuiler 
Uiti Iriintreshin of the kiuleiy 
of jjonua. Tha aip.ceaarul 
candlUatq will bo a iM-ncllalnn 
Roman Catiiulli:. 

Apnllrntlnns wllli ■ i, i-i- 1 1 -il- 
ium vltati uml inline a uml 
■iililriiiiaeN ur iwu r<>lni-ui<n. lu 

Iliu c.'hnl iiiiiiu ul Govern a. 

I.nyulit Preiun nlurv fi< lioul. 
103 I'nlineiXUiii Ituail. llmk- 

asrs‘» .mvvwiyr 


PREPARATORY 


Cnitdl- 

(intan ahnultl have o uepren 
in Enoinourlna. Phyelca ur 
Mutlinmatlce und bo cun* 
veranni wltll riinlempnrary 
Electron lea. Accummoila 
tlon avnllabln. 

Annllcaiioiia, enldHlmi 
aurrlruluin vltua and 
names, otidrasaes and tela- 




ijnlnnd. 

183624 


BERKSHIRE 


t&jE&W .eve, tour her 
fur September. 

Write a.v./rafnrenoee. Pad* 
worth Co lie mi. Nr. Ituiitllnn, 

Bnrke. (439RO) 189624 


GLOUCESTERSHIRE 

.RROW WOOD SCHOOL 
ntlpok. Hlaiintnn, (Hoe. 

I Ulrteniartun 229 I Office 

«Wi.a 


INpKFATlOAlILn 

TKACHEH 

September, , 
ales lo 
and to 
: in the lira 
4 ^oI Of Yoo boya, 
flood 13-16, all boardora. 
TJm School Is gltuBied on. 
the ahoraa of the Mono! . 
Strait. 

lluriiham Baals 1 plus 
, three bedrodmad, hauea. . 

f Purthar dotelia 'and api J-' 
I Ian tlon form from Cab- 
Rln ,R. T, Younaman flA. 

> indefflUgabla Nautical 

SDnoOl. . pis* Llsnfalr. 
Llanfairpyyli. Gwynedd 

S & . 


Speech and Drama 
OtherAsslstants" 


E'tV no 


tunrhnr. rpctiilred 
tniiihnr 1 UH tl nl 

• lltlul Hl'I'Olttl 

8. aeitlor innlail- 
Prefernnoe wll 
n nnnUt-entu uTf ar- 
il. Rninedinl 
lift nr Drnina. 
MinnrlHii and 
Health record 


•atlafiictnry. linalth recur 
eanentlal. Initially the pu 
will bn on a larmly bnel 
nulury Diirnhotn Benin 1 ur 
accorilina lo exuorfonru an 
qiiallflcutlona. Bi 


owanen nine o 


dal Bahniila 
I ll a lory Ex- 


traiiaous Duties dllowsnra for 
16 hours nor weak. 

Applications (no . rormal tu 

The Prlnalpel. . anclosinu full 
aiirrlouluin vltao and namox 

KLzwam-? 'Tsux 

KENT 

ST. STEPHEN'S COLLEGE 
North Foreland. BroadatalrR, 
Kent 

Mathematics Teacher Oreilu* 


llAMPBlIlltE 

MUYLI H COIIIIT HCIIlllH- 
it imiwimii 

The (iiivermire neelt a 
Ileiul fur llils. in. rilnvai l,ni. 
nl liny ami llunrillhii Pie. 
iinr4Mjrv ami Fra.|,ni-niurv 
Hi Imiil. rni-uunimeH hv tlie 
iient. ul r.iliH-niiuii nml 
Hrlenrn to renlsce (lie ,-e- 
yrjmi lie ml In NMilninher. 

? 'he Helmut xeiikn tu pnu 
p lur vfill , Iren, wlih ■; 
wide rnnun ur nidllly and 
MtereatN nml |„ f, inter e 
nniine uf rennunsMIll v lit n 
hniMiy nimniunllv. 

Hltiintml un lha mine uf 
the Now Purnst mill In ijnrt 
dating fruni thn l-li* 
xalmllinil iirrlod. Inn 
gchtml al nreannl line ubuui 
30 buardnm uml 70 (Inv 
pupils. 


I xnerleiicr w t,i. 
primary nun ths 

•■'•*»- in lul n„a knowSSE '■ 
liunr.llnu acliiTm “f 

G-ialdr. The niuv pr »- 
»,r ■ P'i„lra,l (o WIU 
i rne hiiui a adlSSS? ,* 
•hi- mrlilinl, K2(rf. Bnl 
•irriiniipnieni and hV«X, 
■inrd (., iafs rnriJS? 1 "* rs- 
i luiim. ‘ a roco mnian(iB. 

Appllrntlana 

Mu tiler ilolailod ’Sii-.!* 1 

«**.„ from (ho 

(•Iivrrinirs (L.A.H 1 SIS °f 
(old). 39/41 fiiAw 5?ksn- 

Rinuwnod. Honu B . h (45|J}' 


RURKKY 

(THN rilHRfiT SClinm 
r? 1 , *' v, ;r ,, i. Nurrny ODL 

±*kJnA 

In January. | B 83 n ,f P°MiW. 

&-JHr£jSr* 

.i.iti.'id SSfUSSi h \$-m 

rrVJi.'ti.r C,"""' 1 '" 

-'.""V- .iissHr-* Brj 


Heads of Department 


NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

NORTHAMPTON HIGH 
HCIIODL 

Derugaln. jVorthamplon 
Tel: (0604) 38099 

A well ■muiiiiod and •«- 
lierlenrrd TEACHER with 
vlMun and enemy requlrid 
fur September or Jenuery 
in lake rhnrpp of the Low- 
er Sthool. 

The post Involve* in* 
urgnnliailan end day to 
day running of tan clanei. 
age range 3 to 9 year*, 
with ultimata responsibil- 
ity lo (lie Heedmlllros* or 
(he High Hrlinul. 6 Church 
id Lnulaiid _ independenl 
ni-linnl lor 790 qlrle enad 3 
tn 1 8. While boinq re- 
NiKiiisllile for uno of ini 
tup ilnemnx (he pereon 
•ipiiulilted will havn ((»■ 
iiilni-atml fur odmlnlitrei 
Him. 

nml ns parlance. 

Apply at i HIM) with car. 
i-ii iilum vltao end namae ol 

WKra8tt.r l, «sw» 


By Subject Giassltlcaliofi 

Arts and Design' . 
Other Assistants 


dorhkt 

ni iivliloB !?\*P“,V.?.t ’ u vel I ■ ■ 

nml namn* 84401 

the lleailmaeter. l3B**« 0iaa 4 


poac. 

Applications to the Head- 
nyetroea preferably by tha end 

"^deliried , Taneher ; n* 


p»p.. i-Qunuried .Tonenor ■ rn- 
-gulrsd for Boptqmber, 1988, 
/ Burnhbm SCala- - - 

Applications' lo -the Read- 
rnUtrea*. . etotlnp any seaond 

Sf-.vaa s 


LONDON 

BRIDGE HOUSE 


Head 

Great Moreton Hall School 
Congleton, Cheshire __ 

InternaHonal Preparatory Schools iSpSoaraSy 

additional school buildings have already 
The school will essenllaiw be for day .PJJP'tJSffJa cfflidfl 
but there la scope for devetopmen! to msflMne c j 
eduoaUonal scene. There will be approximately 135 pupw .. . 

^ndTdiKaSld be fully experienced In both laacNnfl «' d 

.rom EtO,OOO P» and 

ni.au .DPtv to: Mr*. 




; fringe benema will be avaiiaow. ■ ^ to . M , 

For details and an application formplesw ■PPJV 
(tones In London orHr.N, Lfvlngatona ln fidlnburgn- 


Gabbitas-Thring 

I *■ 1 1 • l : ! 1 1 ■ HI 11 G1ISC (.0>!^ Smi1 

(• ■ A s \.u kMlk Sli.-ft * | (ImbiM )' h 

1*1'. I 1 1 1 1 1 1 \ I "ll(l> H i v\ I \ 1^ K I II- ^ \ , , | | 

I U'l III ."i i o:>, I I L 1 " ’ 1 - 




THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 




pbbparatory schools 

mntlnuod 

HERTFORDSHIRE 
•UCHWOOD PARK SCHOOL 
K,ncr in Sent rmlier. for 
ilBMl futl-tlmo Art 
Karhar. to take charnn u( Art 
HSJahoUt till* lent* I.A.P.S. 
rJmioI. lor boya a, mil 6-13. 
fnad facllltlea and every ei,|>- 
SS, proportion ecu la I. Itnr- 
E^bi with extriin — Nun reel- 
S«n( or stnqla pnrnun nmlil be 
Miidant. Ollier liilPi-nntx wel. 
"i, "but eiilliulitlii„i fur n 
foyrliHIng. Art I tape rim ant 

**appD' wl, li t:.V. ami 
■(Jdri'vxni., uhiuie miui- 
h!rl (0 lififUlllUIMtl'l-. Ilf «•(-!, . 
pork Srhu.il . Murkyul.-. 
Bi Alban*. A1.3 HAW. 
{443831 201224 


Classics 

Other Assistants 

BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 

0AYHUH3T SCIIOOI. 

Oinarda Crux*. 

snswKc 

Required fur ni'litninher n 
Qiulified loarhrr lur CLAS- 
SICS (o P.S.S. and C.E.P.. 
Help with Guinea and Extra- 
curricular Activities an Integ- 
ra! part of the tippfilntmant. 
Silary baaed on Burnham 
Scale. Govornment Supor- 
■nnuatlon Schema. 

A modern riot Is available, 
uilttble far marrlad couple 
with email (amity, or Mingle 
peraon. 

AppllcBtlone Ii, writlnu 
phase. Bncloilnn (.‘.V. and 
nimei of two referops. (u the 
Haadmeeter. (4773 1 1 201624 


CHEBHIRE 

TERRA NOVA HCIIUOL 
Required In Knptrmhtir. a 
(richer able tn tukr L.tilln 
liroughDut tha ci-hnul with 
euie French. Apullranl inuM 
hi committed to buarillun 
irtool life. Slnnle accom- 
raodatloa. 

Apply In writlnu tn tl,u 
Headmeeiar. Terra Nuvn 
4*^. Jurdell Rank. Ilolmrs 
r v P, L* ri C i l « * h rr , *' hr I nel e m 

ur •SK'.e'Si 


MIDDLESEX 

te/lSI/Bjft !'" 1 io 

PMgiired rui* St*ni<(ntiii*r. 


gg^jaSJ 11 "CT! 

Md n9 n*mra Vitae 

nombarS ,n Ilir klniilmun 

Nrawixa/xa". 1 ,nn '»‘ * re- 
••nat. 1384341 2UI624 


Assis tants 

Derbyshire 

LASHM-m-h 


ftWi ' ■“•nil"* Hr h, Nil ur 

cSqrnL ‘j.^hpnelblliiy l j”,. 

fSn wiaulrt he 

"W^Thn 0 in- 

i c . hD °I and 11 m l, .L'L •'*. Hie 


« iffiT me 

'° ,rt wSSW 1 ««'•«» l uubv 

Sb., 1 ° WMi ear , bp 
on 1 *: or a Jj5MjP acrom* 

808424 


Geography 
Other Assistants 

BERKSHIRE 

SCHOOL 

Hmlanondem School of 300 

unmeM,^ ..ddr.-M^: 111 ."-, ivlth 

J'Aj'ine i.umW , of a ^ 

twu i-elernea Th. u-.j • B, l 


twu re I <irnna "u*T1ib iA-JJ 11 * 
ter, ciiiirPB r-riHS.^Hhioe- 
Jtay M 1 11 llond EoJt Jbih Do1 ■ 

h,'U, I. Derkn. hi« M 9 I H!!' 


■ ifini nanu 

lii'iid, Derkn 
(38840) 


iTuunen. 

BL 6 8 TE. 
208624 


GLOUCESTERSHIRE 

SS35* sr sS?"”- 

Nurmi?' SlffiL** "| ll ^ Q *- r «o | d 0 . r 

« j luxl* (3 ■) 2 4 6 ) M ^" Ch 1 n h 

HAMPSHIRE 

nil rut Inns for „ OboopbSK 

gfcsahffl.'-TSS 

Appllrat Iona with c.v -nit 
nainee ol two roforons .2 
HAfOctaeter. Hordls Homs 
Mllfurd-on-Sea . Lymlnotnn 

Hampshire 804 0NW (4 7^3 41 ' ' 
202624 

LONDON 

Sc»tSHL Bll,nOB HOU8E 

j P rte 2 ?o"r n y , £Ji;q , a ,1 " t, ‘» r, -‘ 

flnmpsicMd. London NW3. 
Junior Dept. Age 4 - B 
rnstulrpd m Sitplember. 1982 
n guDlirinii taachor of (foaara- 

{'.•’X l ** .‘“S" Hi Is subject 1 to 

(..E. and P.S.S. lovoi and to 
"i/fr one ur more aupportlna 
middle nrliuul subierts In thla 

, vhi , u.^ c ?' /,d “C at,on “ < school. 
Ability In (oka names a re- 
(iimmeiiriatlon. Salary accord- 
ing lo Lundaii Durnham BcbIb. 

Apply with curriculum vitae 
mid (lie names of two reforaoa 
LP : .. itcoilmlslreae. 8 

™!r, h 3 n B , ;4S ,,r< *‘ ,n "' hoiim 


History 

Heads of Department 

LONDON ' 


LONDON 

t^SS m -“t^ C 5a*3 common 1 -^ 

oiaalnVc V P L y n J" felling en - 

dSna 01, 

53 ^ 5^5 > LOn<ion SW 7 ao j,N fc 

MIDDLESEX 

North woml N 3 9CHO °L 

nged P 4 ?irf| 40 dBy hoarders. 

(jBCaiA 

%ipj«r‘ !s '™ is ss 


V in fun, but are a«k«H p r‘ 
to ba 

SUSSEX 

T »n B . a H M c gfi« 1 8 OL 

Emsox Trtaa 4 DA ' 

qualified 

teacher roQuirid lo tnicn 

less* 

Entrance (aval In Soptem- 

rer«n»u. 8a L A c °("Putor has 
rarantly bean purrhsaed 
Accommodation avallablo? 

. h ^ 1 p P^ l «• ,,| should prorer- 
JJh'y he a good gamaa play. 

Hi”," Pr -‘“h‘n t0 

“=ho°l. i n the first inat- 

JSSiJSSff Ate J. h s° 

tfjV (38078i* y "IStth 

Modern Languages 


DERBYSHIRE 

h&ttt'*'* 

140 '+ ) Sl Bo “r0ing School or 

-BI: 

s?™ 's?a?a« - 

ATHE r i!m. l IC S 0rBQ "»' 

voWsd ?S B "tha , ° , l r 80Om , ,, ,n - 

SSTSS SSSr v . s r ““ hd 

moMS d ° r avau5 l i?e “ CCO, S- 

H » k aw b“| ? h ft2 al ° si?: 

Bakowolt 2 7 34 . ( mat i T 
204924 

Dorset 

£, N jOHTON HOUSE 
BLANOFORD (32065) 

Hosldont qualiried teacher for 
R'V* \ IB required asptem- 
offering GAMES with 
Ql?£h Br “ D ttSl„~S Perhaps En- 

flcVo^mo" n 8 tr o , ^ 1 ivaUa n b?e 0 . rr ^ d 
an? P « B y w lth curriculum vitae 

wesM^stssw - * to 

204824 


KENSINGTON 

»v r ^SS^‘i !SS " 

fi/F »aaV ni,f m J 1 mixed class 
D/ fiilK- 0 ' d "; Burnham Scale. 

fa»Hkr « 

803684 

KENT 

THE J UN toil SCHOOL 

^ Teacher for ■ Form ol 

Iiptn5Sbe®. ldB '•,«8“ ,r - d 4SE 

fJj»P«»l"‘ m ant ta temporary fo? 

t rhB r t° it 

pi'-'S'iirrf'fsaiS!, ess 

lum P vlV?2 t *i >n 5 wllh currlcu. 

eJbS? ssLf sm.*5fcasf 

?GM oo ^h^r5aSf. h ?^o4i,Y i 

205624 

KENYA 

PEMBROKE HOUSE 

Bnrt Ilollglous 

to P E* , XSf!£S. vvl 1 1 ho given 


Science 

Other Assistants 

CAMBRIDGESHIRE 

8 - 13 ) co ‘ ed hoarding and day 
ber VaC |9Bfc roc 8*Ptem- 

£«a?dt. 9 ^ 0 ? 


extra-mural activities.. 

t Appllconte should write 

ff-i5W p * , h**«» to VhS 

lananiQator. Pembroke 

LONDON 


Other Assistants ESSii 


SUSSEX 

Ichool RUN8w,ck 

Aehurst Wood. East 

g:V".y;f?.W'a,w. , n’ s ” 

Boardlna and Day) 

ror Beptembar, m 
qualified teacher to take 
French to P.S.9. and C.E.B. 
I«U ,ll ' r . <1 ' Help with Camsa 
and oxtra curricular activities 
nV-W ,B, e w „ hsssd on 
Qurnlium Scale 1, Government 
Superannuation scheme. 

«. x .a 1 ,, sBssi. l ,n ...T rrl sa 

tesssj&sriMttrJ&ix 


Jl'NIOK HtrilOOL) Muele 

'""fttW 1 . 1,1 ^"Plrmbor. I0B2. WlU8fC 

IIF.AI) 01 iiihtdUy. a 

* suliiei I Idepentloiit 011 - 

llils Bud ullior now appoint- 

will In- required: I, alp flfhor 


with iiumPH/nrKvitlnn w/ll ba 
well mini. At laast nua of the 
iii-w aiipiiluiniants will be a 
rreiilnnt Uarlinlui- ta liolp In 
1 hn buimiinn-lHiiine. 

APPlv . Hi writing, (living 

* t»H i-ui-i-Ii uluin vltue. detai n 
uf si'i'umlorv siitijncts uffvreit, 
■inuirs. Inirrrsta. mid the 
iintiii'S ur two ■-nfernos, lo Tns 
Mosler. Drlinunl, Tlio Ridgn- 
way. Mill 11 ) 11 . l.tindnii NW? 
41. 1 1 . I3R4I2I 202818 


Other Assistants 


now run uuiuusn, games a necessity. Excellent 

. . ■ aecommodstlon either married 

r lencad. ’cello to sober for or slnqts la available. Salary 
■s College Cambridge epproxlmatea to Burnham 
I a (1st Saturday Music I0(]| I, 

me. Excellent pay plus .Write with CV and names 


Mathematics 
Other Assistants 


HHHKX 


i i.'Min.i: finovR 
lleruil ‘4 Gliyil, fir 
Huaanx TNiifl 4HA 
An eniliuafnNili 


rkfiald. 

1 quail find 


CAMBRIDGE 

WANTED FOR OCTOBER, 
1982 

Experlencod ’cello teeohar for 
King’s College Cambridge 
Bpoclallet Saturday Music 
Sohome. Excellent pay plus 
travel expenses. 

For rurtlier doteils apply to 
tlio Director, c/o King's Gol- 

HMk 

Anpllcatlona in writing 
wllli namea and addresses or 
two roltriei. by May 29th, 
(38606) - 203822 


LONDON 

NPPTK.br/OOB houbb 


r.U"y "s C c°. D , r e d,,Sce * W 

■nd %'drVa‘SSr o/* two 0 pe^aoS! 

rS/oconce may be 
^"fl.^i’mSt!? "rom* whom 

SHWi ,ro " v sS& 

Other than by Subject 
Classification 

Other Assistants 

BERKSHIRE 

UMBROOK 

Required for September 1882, 
teacher ta taka middle school 
With the 

P°f"lh* l, |y 0 / more senior 
teaching In the future. Some 
expsrlonce of boarding achbol 
W°UI«1 ba an. advgntege 
and ability to coach top-level 
Hamas a neceasTly. Excellent 


■ SPflt will bo prlsilBrllv tinna 
corned with tho 8-I& year old 
*■* g r o«JP and must bo ablato 
teach French with soma 
‘fry Mathcmatlrn. Tha 

“Sfesaws-- 1 " “ 

LONDON 

S®}« osssfasri 

tovB ‘L* 1 "!* or 7-yoar old 

SggSal ■ 1 1*336^ Pr8 °sm 

LONDON 

1-A.P.fl. Day School requiroe 

2S r .£? t MMr* jv* ‘n-ehS? 

Lv'Ji* JXJPQiil . school Latin, 
Fr fj™ "nd lilatory. 

^SS r .“6iVS!S» 1 "74 6 r , .4 o 3S 0 '5!°- 

203600 

SS™ UPON • 

i(MS 8 S!*M 6 af 

Twickenham 

Schaa . dUe ‘ Uon * 1 I A P S - d “V 


(earlier rnuuiml lu tokn over 
a riuiil-Uliiup Mnllia Depart- 
nini l nl ((its Uuyn' lAPS 
limmllng « Imul up in Hrlio- „ 

inraliln and Common niuritnce S*25«STnod 
lrv.il |,i Hnptnml.nr IDB2. A •.ffl'iCIP 


:/lOOL 

dspendant 


Educational 


... ber. 1982 

a Qualified mualc specialist to 
toacli this aubJact Throughout 
tho age range. Salary acaord- 
ing to London Burnham Scala. 

Apply with curriculum vltaa 
and ilia namas or wro rafer e«w 
to 1 Tha Haadrnistr®”) ° 


■ (iinnuirr Ima rarontly . linen 
piuTiinnntl. Accommodation 
avniiahln. , , 

Apiiliunnl sliuuld preferably 
Im n uuud usmaa player wlio 
cun nasial rnarhlng anti aclioal 
Ural tnenia. olid ahuu Id be 
lirniiHrcil (it run ncllyltloa 
wiiliin (In' silionl. 

In llu, first ill si once pi cnee 
tnlnphnnn (lie Meenmaeter for 
further ileinila - Nullcy 
(088971 ) 3112. 


hallfield school 

Egbaston 

: 1*.!?® Preparatory School 
1 . , tor Boya aged Four to Thirteen 

{ yv* toflulre two qualified toachera for Saptember 1 982 

uv ENGLISH 

wttoly .nother aubjeet for boys aged 9-1 1 

^ PE and ATHLETICS 

' lnei»SnV.V bl l lt y to coach Qam«i< preferably 
J^wiina Rugby at senior Prep, ■efiool level] we 
: ^ - ™ Way Reccer and Cricket 

S ® toSud* a Ul 4har9 o> normal Prop, school duties. 

ft’SJ'Sf three Hundred boys, IMugH the Pre-Preo. 

4 *o 7) Is suited saparaWv. Tlwre i re 82 
averaoe 14 per form Our siaff/Pupfl ratio. 
“J9 ipeclaltab. ta sboui iJil. 

EsKfUf*’ 1 ® cover utmost twenty awes In Ihe Heart ol 
and open, but wrtNn hvo mites of the City 
^^Oeoroten Houm 9, Hne modem teacftlng Worts 
ffl* oxtormve pteying fleids. 
to Burnhem Scale. 

jgyta/ "* ^•paxale Lodges mlghi be svaBnNe for sultebta 


SURREY 

HOMBiyBLD SCHOOL • , 

Riqufta d U ^e pfem b or 1989. an 
Qntnusieatlc nuallfied mu«I- 
dan to take charge of mutlo 
throughout thg-acnool and .to- 


toaeh Jim lor " French .^Fl ; 

to teach piano, uaual du y“' 
Non-raslcfint. London Bur* 

nh APP& ,l VradreM«er - wlUj 
C.V. and naoiea 5 J«W r 
of two raforeea. (47743) 


"t” lQ Burnham 
Write with CV and names 

BRISTOL 

COLSTON'S PREPARATORY 
SCHOOL 

k A.P.S. 240 Boya 7-15 
squired for September, 
1982 a QUALIFIED and pre- 
fersbly EXPERIENCED 

Teacher Of Oanaral Subjects 
to 9 - lOyear olds, with soma 
senior English. Ability to 
teach French esseDtJal, and 
prefarenoe will be given to 
thoao who osn offer On met 
coaching, Including. Rug - 

and other outside In teres 

especially Drama, which U 
strongly established her*. - . 

Salary above Burnt]em L with 
accommodation eve 

qulrad. . _ 

Please apply ta_the Head 

S igater. Colston'a Preparatory 
ohool. . Stapleton. Bristol 
BBlfl 1BA, giving details or 
qua 11 flcat Iona and experience, 
together with uainea, addres- 
ses end telephone numbers of 
two referees. (38433 ) 208684 


BROMLEY 
B4|8TON SCHOOL FOR 

Queffeed ro tMcKer B ?oqulrad In 

Ss?^ ffi’.n'SSj.af Jfi 


wilt be required. Someone 

R r-P-rad to play a full part In 
**ie echDoI Is esce- 


liaaw obiiwii. “■“•"I". — — - ,, ■■■ ,yi inn. 

-nment auoarannuetlon. V., namlna two r 

Apply Haadmlalreea wtth the Headmaster. )V 

irriculum vTtae end the S?haql. Bt O cor go ' 

trnea of two rB J , SK%| WaybHdge. (47443) 


HBlir 

.i wVt B !S?A l .‘ B ^a^ u o c r n ^: 

or nor a. Salary above London 
Burnham with Oovirnmeat 
euperan nua tlon. 

*P « Pr,|ln 9. °n- 
vitae, 

two testimonials and namea, 

SBr*"o?"«w nd *?' B P h °ne num- 
! Wd refereea, to tha 
Headmeater. (58493) 803684 

STAINES 

*TAIN«B prep, school 

<433 day pupils) 

2® o . gradual oe _ In 

ro ^ teach " (l) 

L-atin, both ojao to coach 
’•occtr/ cricket. Interest in 
leeching eementtel- experience 

HOT a 

? r, y Deputy Head- 

*ass? ti 5 i .Irrf 1 WMfisr 1 ' 

205684 

— — - -i 

SURREY 

•WMBSIStSEi*"" 

y bridge 

»y«e h.c, I.A.Pafl. 
j-- . ---JAbRH REQUIRED 

v»s.%sss 

general aubjecta 

MOTA Oovern- 
ment Superannuation. 

PPlv In writing with C. 

_ . &FIZWZ? ifSlVATHiVf 


WILTSHIRE 

^‘LTSHJIJE day school 

Soptombnr qual- 
Ulad^aac hereto , tokn a clB „ of 

T-p^jh pl jj WlIJi c. v. to Box No. 

WOLVERHAMPTON 

wV6 T aS!t ALL COLLEGE 

.e& r r Of ^Seograpiiy 
and General Su bier la In ihi 

YORK 

BT-OLAVE-S SCHOOL 

Junior School) 

for thn 'pijffi U Fo W Teaclier 
eublocta to a 

EW an^heVSL^Sf' 

teft- fo U VimV.. r aV^" nl A "“- 

£• _ l 9 "•■P coacii names 
Mantnr rU |l! rif* 11 * BPJlF *«» Ihe 
sef^i , JV. Ch, £»«' St.oiave-s 

» 31 ; 


’a Junior School) 

WiBSSlVGfrl - 


For full dc 

ftttT Tat? 

mm v * 


Colfegas of Further 
Education 

Directors 
and Principals 

LANCASHIRE 

co »W L 

MW 

V,C E- PRINCIPAL 
i Academic, 

Oroitp 6 

rlcufJr P °J5i b,,,,v . ro ? CUr- 
riciiinr and pastoral mni. 

M r S-c- •"? co-ofd in a?lng 
rnenlf*" caur * B dovelup" 

l98$. t,U,e " d tmt January. 
,_P® r "'aJfurthor details 

paff^fSflfcs 

Ple^SSl. A“«nS.onr W «^KS 

" I - 

Other Appolntmenfs 

AVON COUNTY 

tHSffiwwsff 1 

Applloationp are invited Tor 
1 n 0 , Poet, duties to 


tlan and Ralitod <8ubjacts to 
favol* a *Hnn!! Include -A? 

__ Applicants atiould pansM 
{■ppro prlo t^ yug | iiTcatipn a and 

SSrfenra.*'' 1-1 ''* * eMhr “9 ■*- 


parlance. 

i a in h ?hf u!.**. appointed will 
Join ana Homo Econo mica and 
CreeGY". Studlee sect Ion of 
The sec Mon 
covers varied work nod 


S2/ BV *f Sigh atendarda in 
national examinations. 

jKSsr^r&i 

■SI BBU, quoting Poet Refer- 
ence Number 83/24. (39283) 

* 880086 


AVON 

■ COUNTY OF AVON 


Markuburg Hy.d, Rrletol 
Tell 66(103 

”3iS" N 

, Hequlred ._frum la 1 


Physical Education ? 

... • - 

Other Assist ants ; 

CAMBRIDGESHIRE 

»nd day 

^3fJ0!?4es 

ss 3 


CHESHIRE 

Required*!*!*^ September end ! 
energetic artlat. preferably ■ 
FesldeDl. able to offer 
another subject. An oxpert- 
enced pe r t-tlma non-resident 
art taaohar could ba coital- 

Apply in Writing, td the 
Headmaster, 1 Terra ■ Nova 

5, Y ...i." ‘,sthsr“ ■■ft.sp 


SURREY 

mn-iiRSi rSs 
fcf. p.sr&y VoV fJk 

In Surrey* 


S onlrol Enginearlna to 

taTc anil Technician itua 
aeitlH. 

£3»!ia-£da67 de- 
paqcitng on . quail rice None 
experience 


peratDry School (A Surrey. 

. Appllcallpn Forms by ’post 
from, The Headmaiter. Cran- 


SUSSEX 


ourHoulum vIIm, Id: THs HNj*i»«rtsf, 

w Church Rood, Cdabsslon, BirmlnghBin 8« madej afouH be 

Utatimernw r rom wn 


epp^tmenir ■■ 

■%Jf r» in P accord an ca'.. with 

and addraaaea oi 5 ,By be 
cn whom . r3 f SL B .Srf^e.«Sd to 


-. ( I .KSN® 

HOLMB^gOD H p U^B , 
L-ngto^ar--^ ^unv'dgo 

A , nuallfied taachor for 

% wttfirtMZPsii 

day achou). 

Apply- Headmeater with 
, cumauujm vjtae end namea 


SUSSEX PREP. SCHOOL - 
seeks teacher pf French tu 
P.S.S. etanuaird. with Engllah 
or Hlatory. Games an eavan- 

WEST SUSSEX , 

HAN DC ROBS PARK 8 CHO pi. 
Near Haywards Heath . • 

(TAPS CU- educational -1 2D ... . 
boya, 60 girl*, me Inly 

RaqlilreV In September 1 982, 


Applies 

' jh‘» TVRSr 

MOMitn pain 1*4 ilnya 1 ' after 

SSfMEESKr&a Jfa ,,,,, 

nSoftas 


Rah net 

jfONpgN DonouoH or i. . 

T.i, oi- 

Roquired September 1988, 
»?A k .. _ between two or Tliror 


. curriculum v|tei 

Jffr d .g??tol 


ol two. re- 
203684 


Biibjecta mb Inly in the Jimior 
end jnlddfo ecljool,. Ablflty W 
teach FRENCH . and GYM 
would be particular recont- 

Tfw " furt'hqr ililtllii (eta- 

sB 8 sse. fliSi 


•«]s jsate 

KSg^^L^KjeV- - h - 

^ Application* |q Mr. R. pe n . 

EEfr. JkSSSjf a ^SSi! eu ciiC 


i; ■' 


' •' i ' 

f . I i 


. ! • * r ■. ; 


• ■ ■■ . 1 ; 
! » . ■ : 
.’. i» ■’ I 


•• ;. i-: 

i ! 

"• i •"! , • 

J. r. v.r 

) i;. :; 

it"" V 1 

•» m ;■ of- 

j vir 

I : i 

,f '* « . •' r fl 




• j : i.v l*'! 

..!• 

i>4 

' y'^S 

■■ '-'tf 

‘it 

i-jy 

• f- ij V'i 

m 

H0. 

rti 

•( 1: *.:* 


II 


'^■l~ 




! 4 I 

• ‘1 >, - 
: i I 


1 : I 

1 • ! 
i * "■ ' ! 


•I I . i 

■u u- - 


i i'i ■ i : l 

■■ 

i ji-i ::!:■■■■ 

l.i f 










COLLKGK OF FUHTHKIl 
EDUCATION 

runtliniptl 

BAIIKING AND 
DAOKNAIIM 

LDNIIIIN HOIlUUtltl lit 
HARKING A N 11 DAt'.LNIIAM 
LIAR KINO COLLEGE OF 
TECHNOLOGY 
IlnpariniKiii oi H lima nil ie-t. 
LncCurxr fl GCC IVurk 
iCium-rul Eilurtillcmi 

Scic (IIhpIhv JiilwilHnni'iit 
under Ail min 1st niUiin l. oi ill 
Education Authority. 

I3B3601 JJDUJft 

CHESTKUFIKI.D 

riiESTrntii'ui cm.Li'.ur. 

OF TIU.IINOI.OOY 

li:cti milk iiin iiakkiiv 

s(iuii:l:ts 

To t>-mli biilli full nml iwi'l- 
tlnir* HlniloiltH mi C‘A(i iiiiimn. 
I'JO'IUI mill In Hu vi- imi-ILiii- 
lur riiHiioimllillllv for Hu- i-n- 
nriHfiatloii of tlti-m- rliiHiiui. 
MujiI Iiiivu HiiiI riinilili-r.ilrir 
ONPiirtuurn lioth" In liiifllntr* 

mid Uincltfrni. be* vvr-ll final- 
If lei! mill irni'lmr triilm-cl. 

Full ,W- lull-* mill uiiiillriii Ion 
forniH (s.n.i-. nlioini-i from tire- 
PrlncpuL. Chnetnrdrlil Ccillniii’ 
of Ye u hr ill on v. Infirmary 
Rnuri. ciioHii-rflnlil . Tel: 
au-te-aoioi l . ciuhIuh iIuip: 
4th June. IQBa. 139006) 

aanoan 


BUCKING H A MSUiltl-: 

COI INTY I!t»t«NCIl. 

HI II >( T A'l ION III- I'Ain MINI 
Sr.ili- '.HU* ti-rti-Hi‘i-1 m-r 

lamli-r siK il.il i-iliii'ii i Inn '-*'nli- 

a. i.i.iaToi a aim a /■ 

CAMBHIIHiKSIIIHK 
cm.i.F.ciF. or i ohiiii:i« 

EhUCATIUN 

I.FCrOIlHU I IN Cir.NI.HAI. 

Ell I ICA riON 

Ai'i’l Irilliuil-i tli-i- Jii* Ili-iJ fin 
NiIh post from Miltnhlv iiinil- 
IHvil nml rx|ii*rli>ii( i-il i'i-r- 
i*iii-i , ilutli-x tn i iiiiiiiii*iii'-< I nl 
Sniti'inlier . I'lH'J or ui h-iiiii 
■ in iiiihrLUIi- llii-rr nfti- r. llutti'X 

Will 111, -Unit- Ihi- Ion 

nf >i iiiulnr iiart of tin* vnlli‘*ii- 
■■It i:- VOCATION A I. TRAIN- 
ING I'lUKIKAMMi: fur tiilmil 
liili-llllilnii-il i-i-imiiii. 

Tin- |ii-r» l iiii n i*vii>liit nil will 
liiiic n niiiliu' ii*iu-|ilii(i iiiiii- 
■ult mini I ill Hi I -« nri-ii l-ul will 
■iim> lotu-li oilier ri-iivii-H ivllh- 
In tin- IILI'AIITMI Nl OI I.N- 
OI.IUII AN 1 1 (IHNI'lt A I 
r.lllICA T I < IN. 

tnihirv with l ii iln- l.i'i'tiui'r I 
hi-n 1 1- : Tfi.n.t-I - I'll.ftAH Her 

min mu . 

I'lirtlMir iliil.illi Iiiul <i|i|illi'al- 
tlmi lor in ■* i mi fix ■•tilnliii-il liv 
m-llilllUi n ntiilll|ii , il iiililri-H-u-il 
(•iiiIki'UII i-h vii loin- tii Iln- I’rlu- 
Ulinl. t/il in Hr llllie hill re. Oil- 

luill- nl l-'orlllnr Lillli.lllon. 
YnilHll Slriii-I. f :n mil rlil-ii- trill 
■2NA. 

Ckiixlllll llnli! lor rn nil lit ol 
h iiii 1 1 1- nt lu hr 4tti Junn, I 'ilia. 
< Aft. von aanoah 


ilea 


Inner London 
Education Authority 


CITY & EAST LONDON COLLEGE 
Pltfield Street, London Nl 6BX 

Vice Principal 

A second Vice Principal Is required to have special 
responsibility for Curriculum Development and Resources 
Pfenning throughout the College. The sucesaful candidate 
would also be required to take responsibility for Ihe oversight of 
the woTk in one of the College's major centres. 

The College fa organised into six departments: 

Applied optics 

Applied Social Studies & General Education 
Arts, Law & Social Sciences 
Business Studies 
Electrical Engineering 
General Education 

Applicants should be suitably qualified and should possess 
sound experience in educational administration. 

The College Is at present In Burnham Group 6. The current 
salary la £16,284 plus £759 London Allowance. Further 


information and an application form may be obtained from the 
Secretary to the Vice Principe! (Staffing Resources ) to be 
returned by 1 1th June, 1982. 



Highbury 
College of 
Technology 


PORTSMOUTH 


Vice-Principal 

Salary: Burnham Vlaa-Prtnolpal 
Group 8 (minimum) 

AoplIoaUans are invited for the above post which will become 
-vacant 31 at August 1082. Applicants should possess good, 
professional qualihoollons and suitable industrial end teaching 
oxpsrlenoe. Administrative experience should bo el a aenlor 
level In. a large eduoallonal establishment. 

Further dd tells and aopHcaUon forma may be obtained from: 

. The Sscretary & Clerk to the Governors, HfghburyCoilegeaf 
Technology, Cosham, Portsmouth FOB 2SA (Tel. (0705) 

: 383131, Erf. 247) . * - 

. (This te a Te*&fr6nisBment; previous applications will, be 
; laponafdared.) > • 



PORTSMOUTH 


Technology 


Departmeht (Gra^e v) 

Electrical Engineering 

l^alary: da, 914 - £16,462 . r ' : H 

i Applications are Irtifflqdlrom suitably qualified arid experienced 
teachers fa. lead this department which offers a range- of 
ijulhtJrhe and part-time vocational courses.’. / 


IlircKINdllAMHIIlIU-: 

COHN i \ till 'Nl II 
MU. 1 1 IN Kl l NIN Mil I I ill 
I l.i:iT'ltl Rfi GIIAim I 
A|i|illriilli«Hi hi i- I n\ II --il 1 1 mi; 
mil nil Ii i|ii ill II li-il ill ■- II .mil 

n nilli'ii lur Iln- in Ilim lii-i 

I IIIMll. 11 till ll 111 I- 111 llll-llll*' 

l*i *IH Si-|-ti-li! Hrr . I *HM. 

i in 1 1. 1.1-1 iiii • 

Al. t'NGINI-riMNI. Ill III- 

•nnliilv * iini'a-rnpil ivllh I'.li-i ■ 
Irlrnl liixliillnllim. Hli-i 1 1 lull 
■mil Him ti linn l ’riil t hi ihII.-h 
anil >n In iu I Ifiik i«nir«n*H I'.irl 
III i:ii?i-irl--nl 1minll.il lnii« 

f.i-iiii ti an* irniirHii ‘Ci ami 

i-i'lriiinl i-MHii li-ili-i- iiimlil In- 
III!' mini Hill ill Ilii-Hirii III luill 

roij nlri-il . 

i .1 : r 1 1 nt n m ti. At ii 
HI I.C.ntlCAI. I'HINCI I’I i * 
mi 1 iu: Ci-i Mil- all- •mil < I all 
1 1 1 iinn i . Ml ii I mu in ilHillllli a- 
limn i-l IINC il.l'-i ii-l- all m 
■- nil I'i-i IhiIi Inim i 'nrlirii all- In 
iTi-itiiiai r.iiniiii-i-i-iiiii. r--ii*- 

■ mi ill I Im 1m- 

nli-i, iiiiii-ilior Mllli ni>|tri>i-r|. 
■Hi- Iml iixi rial i-Hl<i-r|niii-|i hit 
r. -J ii I roil. 

r.ct'Tiutrit rn it:ai:ii «>n 

Till- LTl.ThW AIMMIOVI.il 
I'lll'MIl.lNAIlY < KltlTI I- 

t: ati: in sociai. c.Mtr 

I-IIIII.HK fur lUiniiilH aiH-il (A - 

IM ii'.irh, l<> ml -ii 1'i-riniial 
Tulur In llrHt-yi-iir iIiiiIi-iiIh. 
-iriil in hhsIiI in iii'i-iiiiiiIii>i 
M>*||| Hvnrl* ill in I'lni-nlN. Hiii Ini 
Wi-rk iiiiiiIJI ti'iillmiH nml liriintl 
i*N|inrli*ni i- tn tin 1 Until nl hj- 
i'I nl iM-rvlri-n . i-niu-i Inllv ri-- 
Mltlnni ini wtirk, n rn ri*i|iilri*il- 
Aii liiknrnnl In ilnvnliiktliiil iit'iv 
uri>QH uf work would In* nil 

Mlvkniiint- 

l.l'f.'Ti MIKH Tt» TliAf'll I'N- 
Ci I. INI I I ANli I (Alii. AN I » 

i.i i ciiati iiii: in tin- li.r.i.. 

'(>' iiikI 1 A ‘ lnvi-1 

nml Hiiiin- (••-iiitiiI siinUi-i in n 
nijiil-- ul l.iiiilin-i-i Inn Ciiiii'-i-h. 
I.'illlilliliilns iilll Ii- i-M-i-i t-il 
in liavn ii rrli-vant ili-nrnt-. 

l-'iir till Hu* nliiivn tiuHtn. ii 
1 nai-lil im ((iinllflrntlmi mi* ki- 
iii-rlinii *- vvunlil Im iiii uilvati* 

tlllMHIHH . 

Applli-ntlnn fnrmii uml 
fur t liar purtli'iilnra arc nvull- 
ntjlu from tlm Prlnlrlnal. Mil- 
ton Knynaa Collaan. tC/o 
ul«trlilny Culleiio). Miorwnod 
nrlvo. Dlotchluy. Mlltun 
Krynas, MK3 6nn. on roceifit 
uf ii a.a.o. 9 x a In. Com- 
ploicil fornin ahuuld Lie re- 
turned within 14 diiyn or this 
advertise maul. (3B333I 


BIRMINGHAM 

COLLEGE OF FOOfl AND 
nOMHHTIC ARTS 
Blrmlnnliani. IIS 1JH 

1, I.ncTUKF.U 11/ 

MF.rVlOR LECTURER 

■ C6.462 - £12.141). 

Tu teach Dunum t Ic 

E<iul|iinnnt Evaluation and 
Connumer Education un 
tltn TEC lllithor Diploma In 
Home Ecu no mini course. 

2. LECTURER II In 
ACCOUNTANCY (£0.462 - 
£10,4311. 

Required to teach on 
TEC. Hlo liar TEC. HNU 
nml II Cl M A uouraea. 

Appllcuiila Hlmulil hold 
nun of Ihn major nrciiun- 
Lunev iiiiall Ural lone . 

Tnaifnlnii nnil/or relnviint 
Indiietrlul nxpnrlonro duiilr- 
ubici hut not iiNimnllul. 


CIIKHIIIKK 

l.llin A | |l IN I'iiMMIIIII 

Min i iii miiii i til i.i i;i 
in i i - r i ill it 
I llt'l-l I" II IN 

llai tlm >1 i '1111111111 
Nfirthiih ti. I In* ill 1 1 i- » ’\1 ll 
1 1. 1 

11. C | (lid'll till Alii II In 
-It HI I Alt I A! . H TIM l|l *» 

VlilH iniit i nrrlrx niiii it 
Iln- l'--i|i|iilill>lil(l nl uni-l- 

llll.lllllll Mill 111 l-l'lllllll ill 

or rr «-l .trill I iMIli t- ai IiIiki 
ivllliln Iln* (.olli’lli* -iit*l tin- 
l-i-iliiiiiillillll i f i*i nl iniiiln. 
lull mill llillli-l I nkluii m-lri . 
tli ill lllli*rvlni <i ul il|i|i1|. 
rillll i f<*r nil tllll-tillir* - 
1 -i't.irl-il -mil nllli i* it ii. lli-i 
iinirnr*. -Milllti la a||ri 
llllllfl IX 111 ■lllllltllMI III 
Hllnrt liailil nml l vi.i-ii i ll Inn 
is an lil 1*« iiilviuHiii|i-iiui . 


1)1 CAKIMI Nl III 
■ ■LNI'RAI. H ri'llll.-* 

IK-nillrril lur l-t 

Si'|iti*ililii.|- I 'IIU 

I.M I'IIIIF.U I lu (ll Nl MAI 
AND COMMUNICATION 
HlUIIII.fi 

IH.I’AHTMr.N T OI 
NCII.NI'H. C A U.lilNli 
AND III. Al. TII 

Hi*>|iilri | il f min l*n 
H<*pli*iiibf-i- I'lH’J ur in n-iiui 
it a pimalblo llinrintf lur : 

TVV< I I I.MI'llllAUl 
I I.CI I.IIT.US | IN si'll. Ni I. 

Tn li-.lill I'll! nil i. 

Mu l In- uni tli n mill pi >Hnl lily 

Co Tli in i .nt 

will run iruni 1st ki'jiinin- 
iitii- l!)H2 to aifllli Mm-ih. 
IflHS. 

LECTUULR I IN l-()l>l> 
I'll El 1 A ILAT I UN 

Tn H*uch mainly IM-uIi-n- 
alonul Cookery to 706/2 
standard . 

LECTURER I IN 
RECEPTION 

Tu tnarh mainly Ilainn- 
tton to 70S and 709 ntu- 
dents. 

Further partlrularn uml 
uppllcatlon forms ror nil 

f loats ntay bo ulitiln-*d 
rum the Principal lo 
iv hum compliiled furnn 
should be returned by 41 ll 
.lun«*. I y H'd , (3HA4RI 

2211026 


CLEVELAND 
STOCKTON -DILL I NO II AM 
TECHNICAL COLLEGE 
Ra-ucivotisnmont 
LECTURER GRADE II IN 
ELECTRONICS. AUDIO A 
TELEVISION 

Thin poal Is Tar a trained and 
expnrlanceri FE laui'hrr. to 
lead a group or leiTurnrs In 
IIib teorlilnn and ilnvnlopmiml 
or Craft and TEC Cohrnr*. 
and to bo rnsuonBlble for Ihi* 
□nmiilHut luu or lataornlorles. 
Applli unin innsl nnlil at lensi 
one oimropiToti* im imiii m 

FTt:i nml nuhNiantiul IiiiIiinI- 
rlul nxiMirliiULn Is nl-m rr- 

,,M i' r i!!lli#r ilntmin .nml uinfllin- 
t ion form., cun Ijo tiljtnlni.-il 
from Tlm Prliudpul. Sliiiktoii- 


Clftl 1) ,lK nC^FLOPMBN'f 1 Piirtfior ilfl tel In nml Uiillllnf 

... T " “SBSng'.SfS 1 S® ..bbii™- 


To work • an enn of. a 
to am of staff Ira I ii I ml stii- 
unnt Nursery NurwiM. In- 
clmllna mntura nludenis. 

. Applicants urn hivltnil 
front Stnle . llniilNierod 
Nurse* Who hold a Ileal 111 
Viultum Curtlftuto. Uxporl- 
ninrn In tnaclifun ndiillH will 
■m nn ntlvnnimir. 


£VJv.iaar«!& ? Br ,,uh i : m ’ 

Cloning dme fur uppllrn- 
iIimib lx 14 tluyx nftur Ihn 
uppaaraiico or IIiIn ndvurilBn- 

Nnjui-y: IIiii-hIiiim 1 - r l.iii-ltu- 
nr II £6.462 - £10.431. 

f 443 16) 2201126 


for uppllrn- 
yx nftur Ihn 
It In nilvnriltin- 


lurthur part I ini it rs and 
u.pp Ileal ion forms from the 
rrlilcipul al tlio shave 
•iricJt-nAK lo he rhluriicul ns 
soon un lKiasIhln.. 


HAMrSIlIllE 


A l-T(>N CllLI.rOE .. 
dill I iilll tn 111 uoitil, Alum. 

lll.X ... .. . 

Purnnni* ha III Sixth Ioitii 
t k'lfnnn. HUO NtimnnCs. 
ilnnlunainil ns 4 Tertlqrv 
Colleiin npurullnii undnr 
ITirthfu* Rliiratlonniiiiilitl l«»B4 
Irmn HiMitumliai' 1SBS. 
Hanrntarliil Nludlnx , _ „ _ 

firxle 1 frnmNnptnnher JOflg. 
<j.F rrtun HoHUitnlior lUSSj 
Teneher with Bduuutlannl anti 
('nmuinn.-lnt exporlnilrp . 1(1 

I n mil i c nurses . Incluillnn 

. : u. 6. A. oiid n.ii.c. 
H llur-t hand anil typewrlriq 
akUla nasoijtlah office aitllln 
end iiau of word proonuaf* 
nil tauvaiitngo. ■ 

A nt tor of appliratlon with 
ourrluuium yiun- two rn- 
torn u« nml E.A.E- to Pr Inc I pal 


CLEVELAND 
cgi.Lnuu'oi-- art and 
iinHioN 

Appliriitlullfi ni-n luvlt.nl lur 
the riillnwliin I lost to Miiri n« 
soon us tiuNsIhlia 

I.flCTtrilEU ll Assist nit I Hi 
thn llAiul of Deniirntton uinl 
Clothlmi Unit, to Nunimri tin- 
linnil ut Uiill In niiii-sn iln- 
vnlMpnient anil to Haiuh .un 
noitrsus wlthli Uin tfitlt. A|i- 
Idli'nllons nri* nvltml ri-uiit nx- 
niirinmmil (mu turn nhlt- to di<- 
vninp iiuw tut niiiii i'iitiis<i« iii 
this urmi or vyarh. AiiuroinT- 
ntu MHltlirhlut nni ran 1*1 tn- 
cliidu I'nlptlim nml Uih:iu - nt- 
inti! ciiithinii or a i-filninil 
limit Irnl auhlunt. An plli-nii Is 

B ltli itxiiiuTunue In NliMnl mid 
n< Hkllls Will Ml SO 1)11 l-IIIISl- 
Onrtitl, 

Knlnrv Kritlui . I.nctiii-iii- ll 

£6.462 - fl 0.43 1. 

Aiinllmtlon . forma and 
funiltnr oar lieu tarn nhtulnuhln 
from ilia Principal. Cleveland 
Cullnne of Art arid. Dnslup. 
Green Lane. Mldiilmhorijuhh. 

siWa.P. 1 .; 

Whom , tllpy. should., tin rr- 
turnnd within two woiikx ol 
the nppenranca of this advnr- 
tlsAmant. (39B7B) 220026 


SOUTH GLAMORGAN COUNTY COUNCIL 
BARRY COLLEGE OF FURTHER EDUCATION 
, Department of Engineering - Ref. 82/2 and 82/3 

LECTURER GRADE ! IN 
: ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 

■ (2 Poets) 

. ; • - (PS-AOVERTISEMENT) . 

-■Required wiUi effeei frorrt.l bI 8eMernb«r t ;19B2. ' 

^The Suct^ful applicante will ba efMoyed rViafniy in tfi 


-/The sucoesaful applicante > will be erhptoyed mainly in the 
:ijndu*Uiai training ot Aral yeer Otf-lhs-Job Apprentlbea, and may 
'ifce required to work within ihe extended college year. :■ 

. .H is expeo^d thitlhe staff appointed will be able to teaph fitting 
rand machine shop skills and theory In addition lo the electrical ■ 
work rel event , (o Ihe apprenltees employment as electrical 
-Jitters. * i 

•; lt to anticipated that the successful applicants Will have some 


/bpportuhlty to aa^lSt Ift the general academic work of the 
• Department. • . . - • . i 


the field of 


posseea suitable engineering qualifications in' 
frical engineering, and ’ah H.N.C. would be '< 


■ jegttfdedaa a minimum qualification. Teaching experience or 
.teaohar JralWna qualifications would b6 an advance. i 
’ Salary Scale (Unde.r review) £6,034~£8,658. 

‘. .Further detalte.and applldatlcn forme from The Principal. Sarry . 
"■College qf Further Educallon. Coicot Road, Barry, South . 
Glamorgan CF8 8YJ {telephone 733281), to whom application 
. forms sfjouW bef returned within 14 days of (life advertisement, ; 
: Please enclose a b lamped setf-addre^od envelope. 


THK HM F-i KHlU'Am iNAI. ^ 


TEMPORARY LECTURER I 
(10 posts) 

Ronu'Mhi for n yorioil ul 1 1 wooVs (28 Juno lo 10 Ssatumho 
1982) to loarli on an MSC (Vcupollonal Sulscllon 
ll Is anlicipntnii ihat most flppolm munis will be (ull-ilmi nn. 
proportion ol ilm n.iliiry npprnjuiaio for Lodurorg Grade I 9 

Sumo npimlnlniuiilN may hy patl limp, howavor ikurinn'u.. 
work olfl FlT or, snaring the 

SOCIAL & LIFE SKILLS (4 posts) 
CAMERA & PROCESSING SKILLS (1 

post) 

POTTERY SKILLS (1 post) 
ENGINEERING & METALWORK 
SKILLS (1 post) 

KEYBOARD SKILLS (1 post) 

BEAUTY & HAIR-CARE SKILLS (1 
post) 

GARDEN CONSTRUCTION/ 
HORTICULTURE SKILLS (1 post) 

Closing (Into tot Junu. 1982 

TEMPORARY LECTURER I 
BUSINESS STUDIES (2 poets) 

MILL BANK COLLEGE OF COMMERCE 
OANKFIELD ROAD. LIVERPOOL L13 OBQ 

Those aro new eppoinlmonts resulting from Ihe development of 
Ihe Coliego's work in association with ihe Merseyside Joint 
Training Initiative. 

Applicants lot both posts musl have had recent business 
oxperionco. Exporlonco in tho training hold would be particularly 
relovonl as aiiliar or both pools could involve somo Industrial 
liaison. Should also possosa appropriate graduate or 
professional qualifications 

The porsons eppoiniod will bo axpoctorl lo leach s range of 
business subjatls Thn rongo actually taught would depend on 
tho skills end qunlifientionn of (he staff appointed bul could 
include somo of Ihu following: 

Accounts; Business Calculolione; Business Organisation; 
Computing; Communication; Clorlcel Duties; Distribution; Dais 
Processing. 

Applicants ere askod to indicate which sub]ecls they are 
prepared to teach in order of preference. Closing dsta 4th Juni, 
18B2. 

LECTURER II OCCUPATIONAL 
SELECTION COURSE 
£6,462-£1 0,431 

0L0 SWAN TECHNICAL COLLEGE 
BROAD GREEN ROAD. LIVERPOOL L13 SSQ 

Required lo tuko rospnnsihllly fur tho Lllo and Social Skills 
olpmoni on Iho Occupational Sulucdon Course and Ihe 
malntenenco of tho Treinoo Aasoeamom end profiling aysiema 
Ho/oho will loin on oxpprioncod loam who aro conalonlly 
roviowlng nml updating Um Lifts end Sucial Skills Programme, 
onaiirlng that II la txrth otimulutlnn uml mnanlngful. 

Appllconis should Iwvv uppruprinio grnifuato quallficai oni »n 
11 would bo an ntlvnnlngo ll tlioy could alsu offer Induatriw 
canimoiclnl axporlonco. Tho mitciiGBfiil cnndlnlo will nave 
eanunltmonl in working wllh unnmplovad young poopre. 
porilculurly ihoso wlm liavrt mil nuhiovori acudomlc iumms 
during tliolr orliicrilfun lu dflti* Cloning ilnto 4 ih Juno. 18 • 

LECTURER I ELECTRONICS 
(2 posts) 

TEMPORARY LECTURER I 
MARINE RADIO & RADAR 
£5,034-£8,658 

RtVEBSOALE COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY 
IttVERSOALB ROAD. UVFRPOOL LIS 3 QR 

Roqulrod •• soon os jioaalblo. n , lr nnlrs • 

Two polls aro osuodolod with iho TEC Diploma In Eloc j 

for MSC and iho tnmporniy poet Is for a Bpaclol Marins Hja 
Radar Technicians' Agoncy couiho: both “oureos ire fu 
Should bo technically or proloaslonaily quiinMa ia 
HNC/T6C, H/C/PMQ Corillfcaln/DoT Radar Cerlll oa e icr 
oqufvolont level and hove had appropriate kidueirtalo p , 
Teaching or Inairudilonal nxporluncu and/or tiuiniog 
advamageous. Closing dale 4th June, 1082.. 

(1) LECTURER I BUILDING 
STUDIES 

(2) SENIOR LECTURER FOR 
T.E.C. COURSE 

fl) Required aa aoon oa possible, an experienced u , 


porvioea engineer wim qi/imiw-i-"- . , 

Advanced Croft Certificate Heating and VootJfeiJng and/. . 
Plumbing aiudents. . , far • 

( 2 ) Required as soon sb posalbfe, a SanlorLwiuar 
Technician/Supervisor couraeo indudlng Clert oi w ^ - 
Builders, Quantities and Estimating, T.E.C., Civil tng t 
and Building Studies. Closing dole 4 lh June, .. 

Forms «vsRebla ham fSAE) and returnable to tha PrhWP" , 
lha Cpllegs concerned, 

The City CounalM*« nE ^ u . a ’ 1 . 

i-Jbk ll a A - Opportunity EmpkjV ar f" - .- 

Wt! 6 T,c4 ' "*■ ' ‘ 

I m .rliBl atatus.; 


5- " f' li - I'V 1 -**' .•■‘•-1 **'••' 1 ,r '\ 

i - 

fee-e '4 



tHE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 

rOLLEOES OF FURTHER DERB’ 

inUCATION 

JSUUV DERBY COLL 

MBttnvw. FURTHER EDI] 


Smewou- 


9{ Mil. Cornwall 

fe^. n E C Jr' F?U M-'-h. c. 
S S-p- C° ur,fl a B rP mvitnd fur 
APf '/ffioSrinO Lncturor Slrailn 
iSnabtn from H« 

“WJiicMi »* *lim>l ,l I* ", 

r nualirioil, oxiirrlrninil 

»bl> q, ‘vB ror ably i.-mli-r 

•■4 . P LirVi an<t «i'<'‘nl HkllU 
irdnid- {•»■. r “ f Y re .sklll-i. Iln- 
AJB^SSa UlatrlbiiHun. lluml 
w 1 !.. ®i!riiirt)no trowel (rmli-x. 
gltllkjn ctucnno m.u.un- 

f f09,r,! !..inilnn nml ilm-urnl- 

"irMorlnn. IT«ria«l 

*Bf*BBeful uiinlli xiit 
inMirBialJy bu rmiulrmJ Hi 
•'a « MS.C. i mi rn III* In- 
WKS,® 8 Work In tr«»«lui:i Ion 
ii"? E S F . an4 tlic Ni-w Trnln- 

~*k&. .SKS-., VjomS 


COVENTRY 

asUBSSWi^i-riM. 

ife?o°N^o:^!iYsit:AL 

IaKDICAPFED STUIIHNT-Si. 
Ajollciitl* With upttrnurluu, 

Qiifflflcitlon* and nxiirrlnnco 

foftARY LECTURER I Out lex 
io comiarnra 1st Si-ninmbfir. 
1911. Tha succcsif ul rmull- 
due will ba oxported to tonrh 
ONE or more of Iho rollowlnu 
tublKte: ClirmlBtry. 

MBlhomitlCB. Low. Accounts. 
Cinaral Science . Comiiutor 
ftudlce. Courin* afforml 
ring* from City end Ciulldn of 
London InsHtuto Fouiidullon 
Ofliricite lo U.C.E. 'A' 

The Lecturer I vatnnrlnx 
in lor (wo eddltlonal puds. 
TSe Lecturer I TiuniiurBry 
ncanclei orlen rruni tin* 
Hfondraenl Tor oiir yrnr uf 
two member* of (ho etalf un 
unlvsrilty courana. 

Plane Indlcntn nubinclH 
pfrtrod and atnto Lncturor 1 , 
Tinaorary LciLui-ur, or It 
vllUnB (o ho r.uiinlUnrniJ for 
•llhir POit. Canilldutee mint 
have good oepnrlom i* und 
quaiiricailona. 

Preference will be <|lvon tu 
ilmi who era taarhnr irelnntl 
eed Bxperionco of tnni-hlnq 
pknically handlcapiiod etu- 
deriti could be an nilvanlnar. 

Further details and applies- 
(Km forme from: Tho Princip- 
al llereward Coilnqn. Dram- 


iloa Creecent, Tiln Hill l.ann, 
,Tol: 

funefVSiaAVgjgO ) r>d SWjgS 

HAMPSHIRE 

CftlCKLADE COl.l.P.ni! 

AMover 


caglneerlnfl 

Retired from Int July I9B2. 
"IJ* “dp ppaafhln thorn- 
iD? l *. neh .boalr nlni'trn- 
ui! ‘“1 oloctrlcol reiioir mi 
(T, 1 . _Teclinolooy courana 
ue L l .C.I One yonr apimlnt- 
w k Diiaalblltty ul imr- 
5S' IL I “nq a vxrloif laariilnii 
for aultable inriul- 

WSCVI CS0&4 - £8636. 

Ail 

S: "Jn»l or two rr fnrona. tn 


DERBY 

U.ERIIY G°LLEQE OF 
MIRTlIElt EDUCATION 

tn/'PiG! , f. ll !i ,,1 P l ! ur .° !F*lM 

FH f , {*i.*r , 'i ,no LECTOR, 

til Lilf AI)E 1 poi|B> 

. ■ 1. BUSINESS 

STUDIES — to touch a 
rail nn nr ItuxliiDaa Bludlea 
aiiblnrte lu B.E.C. General 
l.oveln. Natlonel 

u’rffJiiPM* 0 ' ■■ business 
I i i- r E - S *. ,r , tp loach 
*-■(-• *■■ A Invol Ecunomlca 
amt Nl ruin in 3/4 at B.E C 
Nntliinul l.nvol. Tlio ability 
a farther rolated 
auti]>-i-| will ho nit lulvan* 
I ni|n . 

1'iiat Ni*. 3. HECUETA- 
RIAL STIIDIEH - to teach 

iuPi!!7 r nL!l!- l il bhothand and 
orrii n Pi n, -lien. Tho ability 
tu cnritrfbutn to Word Pro- 
i'i'*ai>r Cuiiraoa will bo an 
nilvantaiio. 

Poet Nn. 4. BLBCTRO- 
Nl, . ;s 1. 1 ° loach Electronic 
nml Elect rlral aubjocteT 
Aripllt-niitn should hava a 
di-uroc or equivalent and 

ra« r 5f“ y hB toBch ° r 

E NcVlN EE St | 1 -°^ E t2a A ck 

“ , v . ,,r "‘F c,r Bnnlnoarinfl 
Niibln-la In Torhnldan 
■tiiproiillriiM. Applicant! 
Niimild linvn on enolneerlna 
ilnm-nii or equivalent and 
itrnlnrnbly bn toacher 
I rallied. 

Post No. 6. COMMUN- 
ITY AND SOCIAL STU- 
DIES — to teach to stu- 
d -mis un the C. & O. 
ruundutlnn Courao in 
community Care and othar 
Caring Courses. 

Poet No. 7. BASIC CAR- 
ING SKILLS — to teach to 
O and ‘A 1 level atudenia 
on Collooc Pra-Nuralna 
Cuuraoa. Tha ability to 
tr-ach Sociology or Saof*l 
llletnry would be a distinct 


Pout No. 8. PERGONAL 
CAKE — Tu teach on a now 
timrnn ronrornod with the 
Bnrvlrr. Induatrlos, a back- 
ground in ItalrdroualnD and 
llnanty would be edvon- 


Thn nalary for Iheeo 
iiusta will bn In accordance 
with tho Balary for 

tnachom In oatabllahmentu 
or further education. 

LECTURER I - £3,034- 
£R.63B 

Application forma and 

furtlinr particulars are 

available from:- Tho Chler 

AdmtntntrallOli Orflcor. 
pnrby Colloga of Further 
t dural Inn, Wilmorton, 
Di-rby. I>E2 BUG. 

IMPORTANT) Pfaeac en- 
■ loin ntnmporl addroeaod 
nnvnlopn nml nuoto tho ro- 
fnrnitre number . of tho 
puattal for which details 
•im rail .1 1 rod. ,s 3»a«“ aoMa 


NORFOLK 

NUlirOl.K COLLBOEOF 
A11TH AND TECH NO LOG 
FACULTY OF _ 


DERBYSHIRE 

Retired f ronl 8 apt omber 

f&mvEk m^ i [ 

leaai one other BualMaa atu! 

«k rop ^ ?tD "S“")^ 

D HP AR T*M E N V* C)F 
SHMMUNITY STUniPa i E b/ 


OWENT 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

Y^UIRD FOR lat September 

Tra£ t ‘ l l'£M8K. invited 


CROYDON COLLEGE 
Fairfield, Croydon CR9 1DX 


from Hl ° na are Invited I * 

taaeh vseJmeiaE- To I Applications are Invited from suitably qualified persons for the 

‘S-;?.; I ?& wln 9 tMChln Q » duties to commence {RSSSE 

ILj .! n P to achino of Caterlno I 


PRTAPR U A fi ION. LECTOR 

PR LECTURE^ ^ 

ACCOM Mo D ATl O N OPERa! 

R0?^O B H^X lt AI, , ?K ne bbpeotu of 
KOceptlon A1I three pouts will 

TEc CO c£'tS n » B £ t S lth T?R»tma 

denla C *° nd Recaption atu- 


DEVON 

pteaso aea d 
mant on pane 


flaooaa 

E88EX 

£S^E R o°E CKTECHN,CAL . 

Wood view, Oraya. 

Mnnnocmont and Duslneaa 
Studies Depart mant. 

Lecturer Orada t - Retail 
Distribution. 

,SSa lr *r / rDI G Boptomber. 
10Ba. to teech Retail aub- 
iactai t.a. Calculations. 8ell- 
ino, Oraonlaation. and Law 
end to orannlae tralnaa plara- 
monta in tho industry. 

should 


^ Applicants 
been trained 

C.R.8.. C.D. 


I have 
N.D.C.. 


C.R.8., C.D.M.P. Program- 
mas and preference will be 
plvan to those having reached 
MBnagerlal Status and have 
campfaMfl the T.I. and/or 
I.T.O. couraes. Balary Scale; 
Lecturer Qredo I Mln.£ 
3.034 Max.C.' 8.698 plua £213 
London Prlnea Allowance. 

Application rorm and furth- 
er particulars obtain able from 
tho Principal, Thurrock Tech- 
nical College, VVoodvtaw. 
O ray*. Essex - {Telephone 
Grays, Thurrock 71621) to 
whom completed forma should 
ba returned within fourteen 
da ye of the appearance or thin 
advertisement. (38846) 


MANAGEMENT AND ARTH 
LECTURER QBABd I IN 
NI.CUKTARIAL SKILLS 


Rf’tmlrncl for aeptambor, 
1BHB. Hilary eaalai £6d34 . 
CR69H p.a. (Currant Durnhom 
HcaliD. Entry point lo ecala 
drpendoul upon ago. quel- 
llirntiuna ami axpnrlenca. 

Application rormu end da- 
I a I la iibtalnabln from Clllal 
AilrnliilalratlVB Officer ot the 
ruiiooo. Tunnyanii Avo., 
King's I.ynn on racolpt of ro- 
Ulirut With Stamp. ,s “"|iioa6 


NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE 
EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
COLLEOB OF ART8 AND 
TECHNOLOGY 
noportmont of Community. 
Duslneaa and Induatrlal 
Studies. 

LECTURER ORADE I (Two 
posts) 

Post A - To taeeh at laaat 
two oi tha foJlQwJngi 
Accounting. Data- Processing, 
Dueinesa Admlnfatratlon, Post 
0 - To. taach at laaat two of 
tha roll owing l Industrial Ra- 
latlona. Managamant, Trade 
Union Studies. Balary Beale: 
£3034— £8638. Duties to com- 
mence Slat August, 1B82. 

Application . forma and 
further particulars ora avail- 
able Tram the _ Paraonnei 
orriea.- Collage of Aft* and 
Technology, Mi 


. . economics to ' O ' 

With the teaching 1 *07 ‘SatVrVn'i 

'"0 «nd Hairdressing. Appll- 
Ic^oS^cV tala c?i e ra, f 

whore 

axh C oS lh J“ n, . < ? w ®?** NP44 
the 


QWENT 

COUNTY COUNCIL 
FURTHER EDUCATION 
PONTYPOOL COLLEGE 
LECTURER 2 IN B 

SECRETARIAL STUDIES 
REQUIRED FOR lat septem- 
b»r 1982. Appllcatlona ere In- 
rot 00 , h « rD r n , .d ua! 1 11 ■ d teach era 
£P r th“ following voeenclea:- 
Jo develop Beoratarlal line- 
utet coursaa. Applicants 
should possess a Soaretarlol 
Linguist |a Cartiricnte aiid 
hava had appropriate bualnoai 
axpsrlencu. An ability Blao to 
osaiat with tha teaching of 
German would be or consider- 
able advantage. Tha auaceas- 
ful applicant would play a ma- 
i9 r .r“l« | n tha administration 
Of tha Department. Tills Is a 
re-ndvertlsn mant and pra- 
vfoua applicants need not re- 

Ellfe. r " nfl# £6 ' 4a4 * 

Application forma and 
further Information where 
aval labia, obtainable from tho 
Director of Education, County 
Hail. Cwnbran, Owarft. NR44 
9X0 on receipt or a. a. a., 
should be returned to the 

4th ,A w o n ft 


HEREFORD AND 
WORCESTER 
EDUCATION COMMITTEE 

worc/es^eAbhire 

COLLEOE 

DEPARTMENT OF ' 
SOCIAL AND 
COMMUNITY STUDIES 

LECTURER II |n 
HEALTH EDUCATION, ra 
qulred to taach liealth sub 
'JactB to NNBB students 
The appointment la for 
September 1982, A Health 
Visitor* Certificate is an 
essential qualification. 

LECTURER U to b» 


SCHOOL OF SCIENCE ARTS & 

FOOD TECHNOLOGY 

LECTURER Grade I 

CATERING and POSSIBLY BAKERY & 
RELATED STUDIES 

The applicant should possess relevant trade experience and 
appropriate qualif) cations. 

The Balary for the above post is In accordance wllh the currant 
Burnham Further Education Award, and Is at present- 
Lecturer I £5,532 - £0,1 56 

which Includes the London Area Allowance. Additions to the 
scale may be made !ot appropriate qualifications and the point 
oi entry Is dependent on previous relevant experience. 

Furifw parifcv/ars and application form may be obtained from 
tne Vice-Principal, to whom completed forms should be 
returned within fourteen days ol Ihe appearance ol iMs 
advertisement. 


11 E 



Technology, Maple Tsrracu. 
Newcastle upon Tyne, NB4 
7 BA to bp returned within ten 
days of tho appaaranoa of this 
odvortlsamonl. (3BB94) 


Course Tutor to s course 
In Preliminary Social Cara. 
Tho parson appointed will 
Ch Human Growth and 
BOhavlour to 16-18 year 
old students and be ra- 
aponalble to the Head or 
Department for thn orgn- 
nlaaUon and development 
or the P8C courao. Tha 
appol^b^snt la for Seplam- 

flslsry Sesla for- both 

poets: £ 6 , 462 — K 1 0, 431 

P.s. 

For furthar details and a 
form of application plsaaa. 
write 
Norl 


■Iii 


lege, School Drive. Strat- 
ford Road. Broimjarovg 

B60 IBB. (38387) 200086 


Will bo no ill I 

"“viMaamant. ( 303 U 3 > 


Kliklosi Motropotltan Counott 

HUDDERSFIELD TECHNICAL COLLEGE 

Now North Road, Huddgrsfloid 


SOUTH GLAMORGAN COUNTYCOUNCIL 
RUMNEY COLLEGE OFTECHNOLOGY 


CITY & EA8T LONDON 
COLLEGE 

Phftald Street, London Nl 
6BX 

SENIOR LECTURER IN 
COMMUNICATION (Ref 8219) 
Rudvtrtbmicrl 

RMluind for lu September 1982. a 
Senior Lecturer to be lha (rain leader 
for (ba KMfciBB of Com mu aka don. 
ihnmghcnl Ihe CotkM. TO* b an ex- 
ira-dqwniBcdCaJ pod and Candida la* 
wfll be expected U) have eiletartvo 
leichtnj and curriculum dstelopmcot 
eipcrkoce la Further Eduostkai. 

Rather dataQi and aa appUcatfou 
Corn tot the above pan mar be 
obufaxd ban the Secretary to the Vice 
Principal {SuEInx) lefcphooa 01-ZSJ 
6883 and ibould be reumed by Hlb 
June 1982. 

COLLEGE FOR THE 
DISTRIBUTIVE TRADES 
30 Leicester Square 
London WC2H 7LE 


LECTURER pide II IN WORKSHOP 
PRACTICE. 

Apparent* for iHi post ihould pm- 
- **** relevsm qualltluilons and hive had 
a number of year* ptoven teaching end/ 
or Isdutirial expert tree In noilthoa 
icchnii|uc* udn| metal*, plauici ind 
other maKrtab. Tho parson ippointed 
»iB be expected la leach woikjhctp 
icchnlquei tn a urge of TEC coaraei 
up in ihe Higher DTpkmta l*v<1. 

AasHtaocc may he given with home- 
hold rcrnovml expeiua*. 

Fnrthei datab and unilcatlan for mi 
boa the Secretary to lbs Department 
(Ref: A/DL). 

SOUTH EAST LONDON 
COLLEGE 

DflMrtmant of BuafntsR A 
Admlnlatrsliv* Studies . 

LECTURER I IN 

COMMUNICATIONS (Rat BAS.Mj 
Required foe September 1982 to leach 
cnaimaidcailaM In BEC sad BEOTEC 
axrrest al National and IE|b4i Nitknri 
It'rii ud la BEC Higher Convertlae 
courees. The pemm ippointed will ba 
expected to participate u • mceiber of 
the course Usas. 

Oudidaua ihonld be scadsailcally 
qualified and tns cxperieaaa in Cam- 
mei« at Industry. Some icacUm ex- 
perience would be an advantage. 

Dapartmant ol Canal ruction 

LECTURER IT IN PLASTERING 
(Ref. CON .87) 

AppUi»tow are hrelied hoax panons 
havtag a wide tahmrtal expcricoce and 
•“liable qiuuDcatknu for the above 
pou. which will be vacant bom 1 
Seal ember 1982. 


Tbe penpn *pp o t aln d will ixtlit tha 
uidar «UU In as admlnbtridaa rad 
devefopoem nf fell rad part time 
ecu wee op lo Advanced Cnfi of ihe 



QRADB I lo teach In a Mulll-Sftilis workshop (wooewont, 
pware, ado.) (Ref: WTC 4001 

jflK? attemilng iha 0^*23" 

Ma^pow^r Services Commission - Training Sarvfcoa 

to ^Wi>e 8 l 6 BBp.a! Inoremanlsl crwki wHWn Wsscaterrejtee 
■PPwad quswicottona and toaohing or Industrial exjwnanoa. 
wrmB and fyrthtr pariiouters art oMalnihte from lh» 


f-i :: 


1 i;. f 
‘I i. . ! 

" r»'i 

i 

< • ' , ':' 


i- | 

f-. ! • : • 

j .• 1 L !• • . 

ilisi 5 ? 

-.1 r . »; 














,! i . . : 

(' M- ‘ 


f. . ; ! ■; i 
-:|i ■ ; 

:• ■ • ! ! 


11 . 

«Pj jj ; • 

•• H I ■ 


COLLEGES OF FUHTIIHH 
EDUCATION 


LEICESTERSHIRE 

CHARLES KKUNE 
COLLEUF. OF FUUTIIF.lt 
UntJCATION 
Fall! tor Strrut. Li'lri-xf m- 
I.E1 SWA 

DEPARTMENT OF ' 
SCIENCE ANI) 
MATHEMATICS 

i.ttrrimtu I — COM- 
PUTING i'iii|iili'i-tl (ii'Plfill- 

bor I DH2 lp tout'll >iii hi- 
rl«iti* r mirin' i Im* luct I ■**! 'll 
anil 'A' Inn'll, Cl tv mill 
1 1 miiiH N.c.c. liiri'Nlii iiil 
mill pntl'iilurly N.r.l. 
rniir.sc*. 

A «|n|irr-u nr Ptmlvnli'iil 
qunllf l.-ullnii In nmnli'i , «! 
anti iitni lilnii tvr IiiiIuhI rliil 
nxMorti-ni’" wniilil lir |jrc- 
f nrrin] . A kiiovvlixliic of 
upocirii! ur«an of Data l'rn- 
t (in* I nit mill Uni nliillt* In 
of [nr it inuJnr rrnnuiilcr 
laniuiaflo In iln-,lr<ililM. 

DEPAIITMUNT , OF 
PHVAICAI. EDUCATION 
ANI) HECItEATIONAL 

STIfDiUH. 


LECTURER I - In 
PHYSICAL EDUCATION 
to cuntrlbutu to n wide 
utirrli-Ium area wltli nnnrtnl 
i-o fni'ii ni'n In tliu youni, im- 
(iinulny oil unci vnruiliimil 
ii'alnlnn. 


rinuliiyml 

iralnlun. 


A pnl it at l mi rnriiiH 

fni'tliur il.it iilla t i-«mi 
Prlnrlinil tin rut oli» 

l.u.li. (3H366) U'i 


rumiH null 
Iroin the 
rntolul nf 
220026 


iiBUTFOitimiimc 

111'. II A VIM. AN|> C.tll.I.FtSi: 
Tin* ClMKIHI*. Wi'lttyn itm'ili'ii 
l.'llv. lli-rtf. 

IlliFAIlTMliNY 111 IIUSINFSH 

s mini:* 

I.i'ituri'r 1 (2 iuihIhi in lltint- 
llt-fM SlUllll'H 4llll«- In Il'illTl 

IliirKai'Oiniil In II it Him -An. 

Huuk-kuciitiiil. I.uw mill t 'ii ill* 
iiiiii'iii. ri'nuli oil friini I 

Ktitilv mbi-r. 

One ii.ift ** until tin hi ll.it lie 
for luniuiinii ill |ii'i'fi*ill 
a I Inn, LI mi lull- t lino li-tn III im 
riiurso. Cl in- ihi>i 1-. I in tii'il ut 

Wt'lu'Yit C.uiJen City. tlir- 
ciIIiit nl I'ntti-rs liar. 

I'urnn mill furl It ur .li'I.Ml" 
fniin Tin* l’i In. Iinil nt th<- 
abnvn Iiilili'i-Hf i T«'l : Wi-ltt Vli 

Clill'doii 263 IH. r.xl 211. 1:111-- 
lilij 1I11I1* Tlinrfiliiv. 2 7 Miiy. 
laao.’un aaiw-. ii* 

HUM HER SIDE 

I'll UN TV CtllINt'll. 

NORTH I.INllJil'.Y l Ol.I.III.h 
OF Tl:i:llNlll.tHSY 
Klnatwuv. mitliniiu-. UNIT 
1AJ 

A|i|il Irnl lun* urn liMitml l«r 
tin' lollnjvlll't 1 11 1 si . 

snciAi. caiu: - i.i'.n i»it* 
EH II 

Will lirntll <111 will" tiil'Il-IV 
of Hni'lnl rnvi> « iini'Hiri I nr I ml* 
[n ci (.-nrlHIi'iitu In Ninlnl Si*r- 
vli«in. Ability tn rnlnto n> 
Htimll iimp'IiIii'i ii'inn PHH'-ntliii 
im la flX|Mii'|i*iiri> nf rnHlilon- 
tinl/ilnv rnru i-liilill-tmii'nt-. 
Must piimi 1 ** ili)iii-i*L- mifl'iir 
prof cut iiina I l <|iiiilinriiti(iiiw. 

Tn r om mo iiru mi Hfinuiii- 
bar. I BBS or n noon un piwtl- 
ble afterwards. Burnham 
1'F. Hr illi> £6.402 - £10.431 

(■iniler rovli'WI. 

A|i|>lli'<iil»n fm in mill rui-lli- 
or i>iM-tli:iil<irH nvnlliilili 1 I ruin 
llm I'rlnr lnnl I Inriii- nui- 
(ilndm-l. 

lull ami ln|r 1 niiHlili'rut Inn 
will Ijo 11 1 von i>i nil illsnlili'il 
upiiHi'iint'i. 

Clue Inn ilati* • lAtli Juno, 
1082. (33330) 220026 


Lancashire^! 

County Council^ 

Tho to! lowing posts aie required lor 1 ei8eptembor 1 902. Closing dale: 
3191 May, 1002. 

W. R. TUS0N COLLEGE OF F.E. 

SI VlncuifaRoad, Fulwood. Preston. 

LECTURER 1 -TWELVE POSTS 

1. HEALTH STUDIES (N.N.E.B.) 

2. FOOD SERVICE 

3. CONSTRUCTION STUDIES 

4. MOTOR VEHICLE ENGINEERING 

5. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 

6. CHEMISTRY 

7. PHYSICS 

8. MATHEMATICS 

9. ENGLISH 

10. SOCIAL EDUCATION 

11. B.E.C. STUDIES 

12. VOCATIONAL PREPARATION 

Forms/furihflrdetilifa from and returnoblo to Chlel Administrative 
Offlser, 8t Vincent's Road, Fuhvood, Preston. BAE please. 

NELSON AND COLNE COLLEGE 

Scotland Road, Nelson 

LECTURER 1 1N PERFORMANCE 
ARTS- QUALIFIED TO TEACH 
DRAMA, AND/OR MUSIC - TO JOIN 
TEAM OF STAFF IN CREATIVE ARTS 
SECTION IN PIONEERING 
INNOVATIVE COURSES. 

FormantmfwrdoialtfllrOiriandreUirnablaloChlolAdrnW8liaUva 
OjjkOTj Nolson nnd Colne Col logo. Scotland Road, Nolwm (8AE 


.'CITY OP COVENTRY 1 

Via Hilt CqHqqo of Further Education, . .. 

" : Tfh HI/I Lane, Coventry CV4 9$U 
' , Principal: DrH.E. Avery ' , 

. ; Required for September 1 982: 

Lecturer I - Body Repair . 

r , To leach vehicle body repair'll) training and associated • 
lusher eduoalloncpufaeB. .. .. 

Lecturer I -Community Care 

•!' Toleaoh on further edyoailoncoursee offered lo echool 
leavaraln Bie Department gl Social Care. . . 

Lecturer I- Horticulture 

. : ToiaachbaslohortlculluretO8tud0nleonM.8.C.and 
related coUraes, 

Lecturer I- Business/ 

I ' professional Studies 

: >;v' :Economi68 • ‘ • i*...* . 

71 '.Law- 

iStallattcs ; , ;; i 

• Appfobriategrachiale/pr6fBael0halqu*dlffo$ltone required. -»* 
■• , ivTBa^Tng.<^rfnoallonand«q>ariencflinB.piO,flnd ; - 
‘-. i r *. related proieSBlottei are&s an' advantage. , . 

.. "f : * < ' Salary: U £5 1 034-£8,658, ■ ! : ' ./• :k ]. , ;• ; 

v( Appllcaittentormiand partlcvlai^fromthe ' 

. i i- Prlnclpal.towhornthwehbwhetelurnedby . 

. !■ Mopday , 14th JUne.l 992. . 

• ir’.fc-Hi’ "-r.O'' 1 

v •• • ? j-'.'aMfe ' •'! '■ k ' irv ' 




HKHEFOIIl) A 
WOIIUKHTKK 
chhn 1 v coi'Nt 11 

itrtiiu ri-i* « in. 1 nil »•> 

I (III Till li I.IHX AMI IN 
l.l'.C I I'UMI IN 1 All IlINl. 

Aiil'Ili-nlliniH nl''- I"* U* *l 
Im- i li,' iHinl nf Iji Iiin-r I 
ill 1 'UIITlIlll. ■ .■11ll1M'n>'lll>l 

lit Hn|ii'-inlii-r. IHB'J t«* 
mi-lnt ivllll tin- ili'trliil.. 
mi'll I nf l'lll•-rlllll null--'*- In 
tin- Ciilluim. 

All Inli-ri'Hl In rii»'*l *>ri'. 
» l. n . c.iipriiiu Tlii'in v nr 
■lukt-ri w. mill niilpi' 

■■••ii. a i*itl - wlntnl.l 

tin vi* ■■mill niml 1 1 ■ ill I .‘Hi 

■mil IniliiHlrlill 1* »in* I- n« i' 

In 1 In* llriil hiHluin I-. Mil- 
will III' .1 tPllliUll ni l •III** 
1 ,1111' illlll'lllllllll'lll . 

I III lli.-l all ’trill- nil'l mi. 

■1II1 111(1111 (nriii iiiuv In- 
iilil.tlnml I ■ mi. : - Tin- I'rlii- 
1 (ini I , Rnl.llti li I'iiIIkiii* ill 
I ni-llM-r I'tlin iidi‘11. I'l-nK* 
niuit Hlri'Ct. Hrilil Ill'll. 
Wul i f.. II'IH HI1W (All .MIU I 
152IIH-.I l. 


LEICKSTKllSimiK 
CO-OI'FRATI VK CDl.l liti K. 
Sliiiiriin) Hall. I.i 11111I1 liiii'ttiiilli* 
l.iili'KitPrnlilrn. LEU! !UJll 

OPF.KiVn VK dkvlIdi'ni IINT. 

»C«» AN 

Tfiu r:«.ii|ii'rnt|vi' CHI |i , «ii* |irn- 

vldi-f ri'flilmil lul 1 i.iirH.-H I nr 

I- aiir rii- in "il nl ii 111111 1* m iiii't 
Civil Si'i'viinls li'iim 1 li.* 1 11- 
iilii'i'iil lv>- Mi-iiiir In Ill'll ulii 
Ulirl l.iiHf I)i<virl"|iril Cinnl- 
trl.iM, 

AlM'll' iltlcilln urn llivllcil fur 
Inillal uii|iiiliilinaiit>i nil u ivvn- 

t nnr L'i»iitrm-t with llm ikihhI* 
11 II y nf llio pnntf liri tiniliiil 

K crinnnuiit. Appllrantn cliuiiltl 
a vi- (iKpurlftnrn nr wnrKInii 
with Cci-nporiitlvim anil nlitllty 
to touch at least unu uf:- 
Maiiatiiimofit. Accnuntailcy, 
Co-cipnratlnn amt Educntlon. 

Salary: l.acturar II £6.463 
lo £10.431. 

Fnrthor puriiculani from 
(he rJIractar nf SlndlaB. 

Clcmlng dale: lat July. 

inaa. (38SBa> aaooaa 


LINCOLNSHIRE 


CUt ANTHAM COLLFAiF. 
FOR FURTHER 
EDUCATION 
S tonnbr lllqn lliinii, 
(irniiUinin 

Tali (0476) 3141 

li nniilriut tn i'nnimnni:H 
Int Baptambar. 1982 or as 
soon im p<in*lbla;> Depart- 
mun t of Buslneii Studlan, 
Temporary l.acturar I In 
c:omRiuuli:atluna. Oonaral 
8tuil|oi, Lifa and Social 

Shinn. 


Applicant!! ahoulU lie 

f raduutn« nnd praforably 
aachcr trained. Provloua 
nupnrlonca or M8C lire and 
nuclei akllkn rnuulramentn. 
will In nut onannttal would 
Im (leilriibln. Tim punt 
would Im a ona ynnr 
niipaininmiit rron» i*»t 
haptnmbar. ... 1083 dim 
R iiiiillUataa will bo rtxpnctnil 


lOUld lie 
praforably 
Previous 


would Im a one ynnr 
nnpalninieiit fntm Int 

Hnplnmbor. ... 1083 dim 
rh mil dates will be nxpnctnil 
to tnnrh tlm above hiiIiJiiiuh 
ihroiiiiUoiit llm collmu*. 


tliove niiliJeiitH 


MERTON 

LONDON nORUUdll OF 

LltUTliHFH till ade I in 
DUNINKHF i HTUUir.H 
iTomporery On n .Year iioat) 
Application* m-n Invited 


LiniMitirnry 

will Im immliiii Tor twelve 
■HuntlMi from Ml Sruteiiitinr 

S HBS. Tim nurreannil riindl- 
u to. will bu roiiulruil tn leiitli 
(in tin* U.E.ii. fientirnl rilplo- 
mi Cnumti, Inrliidiiia llm 
Y.O.I'.H. nun-yfar rouma 
wlilrli will nxhuid Imyimd (lie 
in ir inn I ncud*tnli< yniir. l-'iii- 
title ran mi n lie/idm will ho rn* 
iliilrml tn tnaoli/vlDii nlildentn 
un wruk nxiMirtenrn (nr Huon 
wonlei liitu tlm Hum nini- Vim*, 
lloii and linvu time ufr in umi 


r poet wliltli 
In r*ir twelve 
iel Seutenitinr 
tomIiiI miidl* 


t.undnn Alluwaric... 

FMrtunr dettfiia nnd app| 
tion nirm . frmn „ 4l»e Cl 
AdmlnlDiratlVB jOrrionr. b 
ton Tnoliitinnl CulioDe, M 
d on PnrJ«. Lundun Jinml, JVJ 

m. rsgyhJs. Mb 




NORTH YORKSHIRE 

i (IDNI Y I'lil’Ni II. 

Yllllli Clll.l I 111: «»l All I - -i 
IT (TIN* »l. I It.Y 

* 'j/ll'j 1 * W'MINIS I II A I IV I 

'".WWW’ V! .331 

Amilli >il lull- .IM' in* Ili'il I 

(III-. iu.-i ** lit. li «*lll -Inn 111 

mu un .mi t in uii'ili n-tliv 

in. -nl . i '.ni.llil'iii-- **lu mill t*<i*i- 
i|i|ir.*in l.iii' «n iuIi'him inml- 
tr li .(I lull- . 1*1*1- >i fiili-tmil lul 

Imi lull' ut nl i'ViutM-h. i' in 'i 

-lllillnr nr iii|i|'»l'l lli'l iul<‘ In ■' 
■ ..||>i,' ul Itirl Hr r i-ilii' tilluli. 
umi nil .nil**- liili'i **it In fb*- 
llllriullliTliHI IH.Illl-l II !•-• Ii ' 
niilii'iv Inin ■ ■•llr*i' > 'i>luiiiil'i- 
1 1 nl I *'■ Inrun 

Ai'plli nl Inn Im in- mul 
fiil'IlU'l' Mill 111 llliii'i llin* In- 
ulii uliiril lui'iin rr.i-lpt nl n 
-i nmiar'l, ill III n-f -i'll ■•ini'l"l'i't 
In mi thr I'rlinTp'll. ' I'D' I 
||..|.' ail All" A lr. ImiiiJmii* . 
Iiriniilioii-i'f. York Yt »J I *• A. 
IM Will >■■■ Ilu-v nliuiilil li. i •*■ 
liirli.i'l iimI Inter tlmn I ■ lilil* 4 
.linn' I'liia. i.Mpmei 4.:ui»-.!(* 


NO’ri'INf JI1AMH11I RE 
COUNTY Cl H*Nt 'll. 

A IINIJI.II A N 1 1 CAIIIION 
cot.i.i (il. <11 I Ilium II 
IlIHU-ATItlN 

i.i'.criiiii.it 

lil'IMle | 

£».U34 - CH.ftSH I fn V 
nwurd ueitillnul 


Riiiiiilreil l.«r *i*T*trinl»er. 
I'Mt'J, nr 4* nniiii •'* i*«« I* 
lilt- I liereiillei'. In Hu- lie* 
piiri uu'iit nl lluilni'Ni Mil- 
illiiH. tn ti'iub Tvih' writ Inn. 
Hln.rtlmiul uiMl Hi-i ret.irlul 
Dulli'N. A ti-m'lil nil •iiinli 
llliutlnn mul U kui.wleiliie 
of Wont Pi-fui-fiflnii ** mild 
Im ail aiivuntnnu' 

Entry point on ilu- nnlnry 
scale nct-nrdlmi to nuul- 
ificatloiis anil exiterletu e. 

Application forma mid 
further particulars arc 
avullahln from thn Princip- 
al of thft CollL-nn. I) lull v 
Avenue. Mnnjjorloy. Not- 
tingham. NCI3 ADR. Tel- 
Nnttlnuhulll (06031 

076303. Clnnlnn tlnto 2nd 
Juim, IQ83. 




NORTII YORKSHIRE 

H R «»IW ll O d F f ° A r |l T 


time coureoB I 
. t|an«l td-.edVD 


. end :-i • haa > 
Foundation 


■edvanaed ‘iovel 
or arena of 'wor 


Oraphica. 
aiippqrtea 
. General 


CLARENDON COLLEGE 
OF FURTHER 
EDUCATION 

Application* uru Invited 
(or llm fnllowlun pn.i.. 
vurant from Int Hep turn* 
bor. 1UB2 (entry polntn on 
the approprlute salary 
■cal os uimpr dlno to dual- 
Iflcatlone and nxparlancn}:- 


LECTURER 
Grade 11 

K6463 - £10431 (Puy 
award pending! 

FRENCII/OERMAN 

The nilrbennflll Hppllf ilillf 
will im rniiiiirnil to tencli 
I'rnnrh and Oorniun ut 
CI.C.F.I 'A' Level natal Mil 
other cnurtittn in rull-iline 
nnd part-ttnm HliiiUiiiln. 
Iln/nlie will nisi* tin re- 
Hpunallile for nnnin or, tlm 
ml m in In tint inn of n lhriie 
luniiunima noctlun. Cuiidl- 
< la ton nhnulif be gradiiuteN 

a dth tenclilnii uuallficn. 

Iona ond prevlaua taectilng 
axparlnnim at 'A* lovnl III 
bath laiionnnnn. 

Fur furtlmr. iletalli 
plrane nee Imlow next 


pirns" nee im 
lliron vni-uiiLTeN. 


l.ncrriiiiitn 

Orndu 1 

£9034 - CUA9R ll*n, rtwnnl 
poiullnni 

nAKEHY HUUjrCTH 

Rnuulred .. to tench., nil 
uximm'Is of link my with n 
Mpiii'lrtl iiinphiiala .un llrnnil* 
iimkliin nnd For in an lei I 

iliiiiifn. Appllcniiin aluinld 


. l ’ ' lN COM- : ' 
• • py'i: -tot . one - Veer' ; 




*1 ,Y MOUTH MIIFI'ULK 

ill I I ill <*| Iiiurilllt r t'ULK 

•VVl V.Wu'V''" I M,N1 or 


ri.YMOOTII 

i J’i 1 1 ‘i 1 . 1,1 I UR Till H 
llll'C MIliN 111 l*AI< I Ml is | 

• ■i iii ». run .\i 

TNI. INI 1 IIINll (ill Mil VI 

Pit in i ll-Al II I mill H 

llli'pul* llnlil ,,( I lr |ir*i | in. 'i, | 1 
llr. |l|1i ill Mini* t-( ‘*r|tlr|||l,..| 

I'lll,! . ir >i- n.i.iii llirimd.i m 
III nf Hill' 

Ai'plli '1I|I« h.inl.l III, .lit I,.- 
,ir.li1*i'i(r f will. r *|.r i |eu> .< of 

■ IU' "I'riall.'ii nl ,1 Im .in I . il|r nr 

| ln|U1l I llir ,1 1 € ,"« nt |r,|, I* 1 1 1.| r, . 

I'rrlriii r iliul .1 t>ut V.n tnm.l In 
•■le. Ii .mil t iiii.l inoilrin i. i I i.i. •! . 

■ hi* me i i iimi nl 

I lie ail. . i"*if I i.i . .iiiitlil.il e —111 
.lffl-l (lie Hr. vi ul tleimi Iiiieiu 
will! mluiliilf liulliiii. |i|iiiuiIiii| 
ml.l .tr*e|,.|i||i,.|ii ul ... n.leml. 
ui'li .mil .if f ,'f -Biieui lr. Vii* I . 

ipief 

•■till*! I (11 . .1 1 1 II - i I ,1 *1*1 1 
i Inn' i In ( 1 4 .'Nil liuulri i.'tlni 
I -I A pi II UUl.'l 

>\l*lilli ntl.iii |.Mii*» mill (mill 
el ■■ hi (I. ulni f ISM ■ | lir llm- 

Iflull I .ilie'i"' .il | Millin' 
I llm illlull Kliiua 111. ml I let mi 
liorl I 'I* mi mill PI. | MJI. Iel 

■ pjp-ii .164/111 <4 4 . mi.* * IIH.tr, 


. ecoprdiHB to 
'.end axparlanoo). 
i ■ AbpUootlon 
. further partlcul 
' obtainbd (upon 


it Ion forma and 
particulars may. be 


' obtained (upon receipt - of a 

; S5 S-SSi WiasSsS^! 




Kauri 


KB034 E86BB (PdV award 
pending, . 

NURBtNd STUOrea 

APPLIED a ioiteWcE 

o leatii on. a 
jutXpj in the 
Itn: Cere arid 
apy ■/ tijoludlng ' 

■d. preferably 
!ned :,and have • 

Induatcrel/ 

oil e x per tape e. 

Application rorme. and. 
further particulars fof the 
above - four vabancicipt 
Clarendon ., College . . .are 
available from the Princip- 
al of tho College. Poiham 
Avenue. No ttlnab run, NOS- 

-v & 


OXEORIINHIRE 

iiSI <11(11 ■ «*| 1 I (.1 in 
I I 'It I III II 1 III ■<■ V I IIIN 
iiim ui iim.hi. ll((■l■.l oxi 
is..\ 

I elej.liiMie (lm(iiill I Hill.'. I 
■I'lll l I 

Auitlli -il l.iii'i ntr In* li.'il lr"Mi 
•mlialil* iimilllleil iin.l estu-rl. 
•-■!< iier-i.il- fi*r I lie ImII.iw 
MU, IlnM s •«* iillulile 1 1 Mill | 
nfipleuil.rr I'lli'.l Ini A 

I.I I 1 I'll) II II IN I'M.INI I II 
INI. I'AMIIIN MIKIN', In 
tilkr ■ r '•|i.iu*l lil III * l.n imt. 

I I uin.ikliiu i l .ill iMiir-p* In- 
. In. Ilim lintiiluu I., llie -Inn. 
llill'll'i »ei iMiiiiieililril Ii* file 

I ilullleer inn III*! ii — l * * I i ' ii Inin., 
Ili.niil The nt.llllv «<■ Ir.i.li 
I Nt: Hill, (line IimI iiriiui iiln- 

ml ii, i mul i*|, rr i*< Inn If e-ifiin- 
I lul . 

(lilA I.I.C I UUf.lt II IN 
l-'AMIIltN A (.1(1. A I I V I! STU- 
DIES tn lie i ,if iiinif llile fur 
thn il»Y-t<i-ilnv riinnliiii nl Hie 
Cre.lt I* e Hltulli'S leiiin Willi III 
ii iimltldl'ii Iplliuirv .lemiri- 
iimmii umi vvlin *vui, 111 In- r«- 
purled to teni'li Fn-lti«in. I'.it- 
tern Cntiiim ami trominmi 
Care Studies tn flmlenl- Mil- 
In win, i pal't-l line r ourae'i in 
t lii- Clil.l 780-786/7*19 KirlrH 
t<* Purl II Invel. ill well a- 
OCi: 'D* mul 'A* Ir * els Ii, 

I'elnteil ilinneallr sublritf. 
Ability In tiller one nllier 
mihleil or amirrla nl Clnlllluit 
Tiu'llimlMiiy f in- (nll-llme flu- 

ilnntf till tr.l 1 in l.'ln- 

tllllUl (| ii-IiImii Sni litr of II,** 

I lulu-try I w unlit I li ml*<i,i- 

I n tie. 

Nalnry If In m i <u ilnin e **llh 
Vila* lliiriillnm IL fiulea lor 
l.ertlirrrf II. v|/ £6.462 

LI 0.43 1. 

Further mii-tli uloi f nini m*- 
lillratlMii ftirins iiiuv lie 
(•blntneil from the Prim i|i<il in 
wlinm loinpleled ninilli ntlnn 
forms slid n 111 lie returned 
within 2 weeks of the npiusir- 
nurn nf lliis ad verllaemanl ■ 
U.A.E. pinnae, 

NORTH OXFOIUIHHIIU: 
TECHNICAL COl.I.CCiL AND 
NCHOUL OF ART. 

Hruughlon lloud. nauluirv 

llriinlre^i^r'roni 1st Heiitnnlier 
1UB2. n l.eiturer I In llnlr- 
ili-e-f Hill. Auiillciintf lit una- 
nesalnn uT « Mnsiec t -|-«l Isinnn 
Certtrifnie In nddlllMii t»i llm 
Citv * Gullits 760/3.. stuMild 

linvu n I trade expei'lriu e 

In llnlrilrenslin, ■ I apei'leni r in 
IT nsl,' Uenut v Tlirrnuv wnnlil 

,n | uV.lSer"re , 3; mill 

OXFORD 

HT. Cl. A 11 It* N IIAl.l. 

Hee ml veil Inenu'iil luiilm Hlslli 
1'iirm i.uiiiiiisi. <4 7824 r 

_ ^ 3301126 

HIS ETON 

M r.Tic >[*< 11. IT AN IU I IK inn II 
III hEITON 

HUGH ItAlHD trill l.r.lil. Dl 
FiiHTlir.ii i:iid(.a ridN 
i.ECTUlir.ll if IMI Al l mnl 
I Kiel I, Il I Miuiilu Hun HI in I v 
lat k*.|itpnilinr (Mill mi 


I *11* A lit M KNt (IP UN 

■' I 1 K I riMt: kTU rn EB ■ , n 

•ul vert If eiuent) fc8 ‘ <R ®- 

lle.iull i ll, Q r ... 

».»•« Til her ^OR* n P R M JJ* 

•*' '••ill „ n „ w , d i'eADB 11 
• ■iiiifi-f nffrreU by "thJf'Tol 
(•■ii tine iii ..r Murltlmo bu.hP'* 
Auclh niiis shnulri 5V*" 1 * 11 ' 
•liinlll led. ItevS ?KMit h laJSS? 
im, eviH'rlenrn and bs sSF*"!' 
(••.ii li iinuoral nsuticsi 11 " 1° 
»*'i (h in f <ld [ ( I ewi i a of* ' , !“b' 

Water 

MhoJiirne^s^'ir 

« i , .ule || £6.463 -t lo"4V U i r,r 
I ,, rllier dntulls nnU apn]!;,. 
ilim li.rm may bo ohi-lnii 
S' D'e I'rlni-Iual, Lowb«i<S- 
i mi..,,.. ,u k uriiier EducSfi 1 ^ 1 

i-Im-Iiu, ilnie fur rsceipi of 
i > <<ni|i|e|e.| anpllratloni i! 

Ilii ee *v.<nks n/lor tho anDeu 
"f ihls mlvurtHomSS? 
l*i e vltuia anplicsnlB ivlU ba 
• Mi,..|.|.'r<'il nnd noad not 
«iu*iv. i .vrtiii'ii aaoiffli 


Mpiii'JiM iiinphiials int llrend- 
iiiNKliin and Fermented 

(liiMils. AupIIliuiis nluinhl 
have (iiiiul irmle axtierleiure 
anil im fji-oragaluiiallv iiiutl* 
irleii. A Unu liliio tmtil Ilia n- 
llun nitiVur . ncevinna 

I nni-hlnu naperlniuu wiuihl 
,e an nilvmitiiue. 

For fiirthnr UnlMllM 

nlaiiin.HOfl bnlpw nnal two 
Vacant- 1 1, a. 


LifcTynBiF 

Di-ad a If 

£6463 — £10431 (Pay 
award ponding) 

FAHHION 

Irad to iinUnrtiikn 
jiblllty fur „ tlm 
ng or all usneota or 
ug dealgn and mami* 
■a to full*Ume and 

a mn atiidaute on City 
ullda or London In- 
iltute Courses. Applican 
should ba bu 

Iflad . preferal. _ 
trained and have sound In 
Uustrlal pxporlenfla. 

__ Bxpariebca In -Purtliar 
Education la ea»entlal. 

' ■ Foil '■ (Ui-ther 1 ; ddtatla 
.. pique Bee ■ below next . 
Vacancy. 




am ii, an (uiaailile ihermtiter 
A PI il Kan fllliulil pnanr*' 


urnilunie 
i elevmil 


fliMiild pnaneae 

uiinlHIi nllfinn anil 
• ear III liu/l ml il nil' In I 


llrl/<ir A illnlenf limn 
dll Im liMiheil Im . 
I- nllitii <|nii,|ln mi' 


HOUR ULE 

Hdt.uiiH.i. r.'cii.i . i:i> i OF 
TKClINfll.l HiY 

: mamw. 1 '. 

Heiiulred fur He|iiiMiilier 

I.ECTUHF-H rillADi: 1 IN 
COMPIlTlNCi 

tTninnornry — for one vein- 
111 Drat , Inetancn l 

Halilry . KB0.14 in 

. OetnllM mid euullcdliun 
roriiin from I'rlinliiul un 
rncefpt or M.6.e. (3*^4^^ 

SOMERSET 

YEOVIL COLLEGE 
Yeovil 


^lomber 


liter. JM 

eV?kctAi 

UTUNO . 1 


-teach up to Higher Tt 
, cion Certificate lave) 


nxparlencn and aual- 


I Pi ca tiotfe 1 * nc " an “ auai- 

_ Anpiicstlon forkna and 
further details from the 
Director, .of ReaaUrcre. 

sjss; 1 Co fe. ""iavii 


WARWICKSHIRE 


. Warwick Nev 

Loamlngiun Si 


mulreu 8, 
, Lnntiirrr I 
araphlf*. 


npll nt lan . farm and 

WniBR 1 '; 


HUNIIKR1.ANU 

11, IRlHXill OF SUNDERl urn 
I. Ill •CATKIN IIEPARTMint 0 
MUNKWKA IIMI lUTII ,ENT 

< (ll.I.I.Or OF FUHTHEtl 
l.lllll'A ri(»N 

Aunll* miMiif am Invited f~ 
(lie iiM<it nf Lectubpb 

< Hi All). I l«. leseli G.CE'a 
■in il -A- level HOCIOLOcTy [„ 
■i leniiHirtiry period or ana 
ve.ir innininUL'Inn 1st Bealan- 
her. I !IH2 . Applicant. Kd 
|n.-.-n— a dournn In florloloav 
<11,(1 iireforulify have quallllid 
( i'i,i lirr statu*. 

Huliiry scale: £3034*-£(U| 
(*.n. 

A Mill Im l [on farm* tad 

further (Ivtalls availabla upon 
i-ix-elpi nr ii stamped addret- 
-■•il envelope, from the FriB- 
"ipul, Munkwearmouth Ccl- 

lni,e uf Further Hdiicnllan 
Swill Ml rout. Sunderland, 8111 
I fill. 

ClosiiHi Unto for appika- 
IImiis: 41h June. IBM, 

>383211 aaonff 


HUNDERLAND 
IK IltDUlill OF HUNDERLAND 
KDUCATION DEPARTMENT 
MONKWE ARMOllTH 


< .01.1. rot: OF FURTHER 

f.ducAtion 

IIF-ADVERTIHEMENT 
Applli'iilltiiia urn Invited lor. 
the pnat uf bENlOIl LECTUR- 

nil '. u L Mf?T r A“sre , ;‘ l s i ^(i?'! 

In tlm Ilennrimont or BualnaH 
Similes nml Loiiouape*. 

Candidates must be Itaehsr 
trained nnd liavo canildsribli 
experience In tlio tpachlns_ 
ihn serrmarial and clatrlcil 
skills. Oruiidele ur Bqulvaleal 
status deslrnhlo. Evparlence 
In business la otsantUl. 

Duties to commence lit 
Hnptnmhi'r. 1989 or «■ ioon 
as iiMssltiln tliereafter. 

Sul'irv srele: £9.984- 

L '( :ltisiiui ' tVita rur npplica- 
t luiis i •axis i June. I9M- 




HU1TON 

I.ONIMIN IIDROIKIII OF 


Night Inti'il*! H;"! 11 
Hill-rev. NN|9 *y . 
Tr 1 : 01-647 0031 
l.n, -Hirer llriijl" I 


e<eiiirmti"r. 
vm, ntlumil 
* see A 


Hit | / ronu | i , °d far 

«" H » JSUSSSA 


rsuerteiM-e. A sli-rnntli iim 
wards ilonlin. I.Ulsnil wink 
nilrl/tir A illniensliUMil llilnklnu 


I llllUil del, ills nnd niiplli n- 
iIhii Turiii (sue iiiM-H omiii 
l’l'Ku Inal, IlnuM ilqlol (.nlteue 
•if I' nrllier liiiu ill I im. UnIIImI 
liilll, I ■ llnliile. Mel »" VsKle l.iMJ 
fl'.W. AoPlirailnn IIicmi alunild 
1*e reliirnnd <l« faler llian 1*1 
ilnyM nllnr amienrHni e nl 
•mIVui Use, ilnlll . I.IMHIIJI) 


viiriel v nl lieilMirn, mu 

dernil. Hulncv 'VAILamS. 
£4'Hi l.n | i<)i»ii AMowanra. d 


tamkhidh 

TAM, 'iWJ8aWS’* 

‘■'BfifftlifiSEW* 


aSr^SSgL 

Uf i o n,; hi no* I* v n c la I mUJ! 




(iBseRtial- 

Appil«‘‘2P, 

further par 




WILT8HIBB TB _ HNicA L.. 

Twvm DO& T IZ 


.gStf* or 

e BB V^ 


mm 


BPNi! 

lege. . , ...„«ir f to : 


mm 


THE times EDUCATIONAL SIJPH.KMBNT 21 .S.82 


COLLEGES OF FUHTIIKR 
EDUCATION 

miUKl'ied 

WILTSHIRE 

CHIPPENHAM ti:i:iinic:ai. 

HN.8 

tip 

' for II hum Iltilif-IIIN tn 
Su FOR ARY M M I'M. -TIM F. 
iairt from 1st heptcnilici . 

S9 22ctnre (“K' I l» Vehl. le 

Bn Eoc?uroV'' , (*rinli' I In Mel tin- 
„uil * KH» l run I, M.rvK in., 
n Lpdurur Ornile 1 In tluilil- 
'nn Const nil (Inn will, til" 
eiaphnali »(i Rrl* kwurk umi 

^LeWurnr 11 (•I'tiih- I In IImiiwii 

crift and A I .Skills 

Applicant* in us i he I* re— 
Niradto (null ml « vnrletv nl 
rounos l„< UmIIimi iirn|i<is(.,l 
'S'ew TrMlnlmi I nil hi live - 

Mursea Plunned to -inrl In 
Spiombnr. 1082 mill sulile. I 
approved in, Mill lulls nt n-r- 
iic* relsilnn Im hi, emended 
rolloaa yeur. 

Further ih-tnll* mul nitiilin- 
iIqp torn, uvullutile Iriini I ti *■ 
rierk to Hi" iiiivi'rtinrs nl the 
CollaH? (Tel 024*1 60301, 

Ell la 7 1 ■ 1333061 2^■!^1H2( , . 


WIGAN 

METROPOLITAN 
BOROUGH Ol- VVK.AN 

LEICH COLLEGE 
Marshall Street. Lnlgh. 

Reaulrnd fur I si 
September. 1982. 

Department ol Humanities 
and Art. 

LECTURER I MUSIC 
Post Nu. 0 60 8H 63. 

A araduatn immlclun tn 
assist thn llnud ul Music 
with the tout ti I ii ii ul -O' 
and 'A* level Mush . In- 
Urumonlal mid « linrnl 
aroups. the Adult Mtisli- 
Foundation Course uni! 
•dim Instrument nl ten, him, 
In iha Adult Mush' Centre. 

LECTURER I 
HAIR DRESSING & 
BEAUTY 

Post Nu. 0 60 87 92 

Applicants must Imve 
thorough snlon untl 
tench I no DxpnrleiM e umi 
. qunllf Irutloiis tu ttoit h ntu- 
danu oil osnerts uT llalr- 
drfiurin tu City and Guilds 
Certlflcalns level. It will 
niio bn rent, I red in ten, h 
Btauly to thn level „f the 

StLbTWhB S,.'* 

'"ws&ffl Wiis:? * 
“"“MW, 

nu ,u 

„,Tho pnrauns nnpMlnirrl 
two n h ,“ "/P"''' (!*• K» uf f nr 
h B SI. » obler is i ruin 

*v/fs7™ l S <*n , 1 , tiroes 

Sin. Tvii. 1 . dtininnns hi,,- 

aroliJi 1 L" ,un . "" well .is 
BKi.i. .■nrviie m uthur 
Sublar* 1 ** t i* , I r i'Olleue. 

Law " t ni.lS° ,,u I n J Areas i 

Uon.' Adinlulfirn- 


lu^hv,.^ Oman I so i ion h» 
lnd El i V 'r?"f.‘’“« ■ Niimeiacv 
Ina A, t? ul, llnii. Aeiuuut. 
Milhous!" Ouniitltnllve 

s»rxWiV‘'Kv •» 
S^srH'n: *h 

..VAT„. 

t,IR« • * iu; 

Po, ‘ 6 no 87 nu 


r. MA . 

. NoT'i'go 70 88 
gT® A »0Dfl|, rumpuilny «, 
H°iMa|na B,,u I>#ta 
Uauiantan.. cou 'l*®6 11 end ■ 


^•"Butlng industry. ,n U, ° 

^Vt% , 0 C «TO l gJ« Y 

Crtn- 

'ft: 

j®^" l "aRffl r o. r0b * V wll, ‘ 
1 \ rt M«?! »S! l StJft , . n * ,er,nB 


, /”■' ~='S'il R a r? 4 

' SvJ^^ llt |ttOfne OU,U bB 
TBnl , l n J) •0*nn?/P <, " , ‘* '"’HI, 


• — 1S«V»'*SIB. 

'. <tU*!iMklatsr *«.. 


- fB' .«S}:t*;„! 


"R: . ~r , “" ««nq* , r rt*. 

mm #sg, ■ 


WARWICKSHIRE 

o K f 8,!,RE 

BfSS. rrrdTS & 
S 

V.'.JV". "" ,% "‘Sl lowVng r e^b! 

1 ■ Phnliniraphy 
t,.,?, I, , i‘w. l . n ?.V‘ st «*Ho« 10 

t'iiml, niio'iou to 

Gh'ii n lug. fttbr,c * “nd 

Muiile» , . l,,,no Ma 6“«oment 

s - Health Education. 

win'. ''hyalcnl Education 
skills. rnfro DHon/aoclal 

'" j *!v ■?i" n %ass 

•lllll/itr Cliiunlatry, ' ny * lc " 

.^vBsr450i»5jF- 

II,'?- ' v,, *dlng Craft p Pac . 
> 2 . Computer Science. 

< P> o^V7o<. ' ^r -SiSilSAn^: de - 

Salary: £5,034 — £B.asr 
imr annum (under review), 

.. i her details and B p- 
lUIrmipn forma oro avail- 
Mart 'AVff t, '° Academ ic 

ot tlia col- 
l»ur. Cloilng date 4th 

fe, «h {5f? v £i*:s 

ni>l>lylii{, fur. ) 139203) 
220026 

WEST SUSSEX 

VEcHNo S LoaY COLLBOE OF 

{JgfHi^^FleJda. Chlcheatar. 

ITV T ri»? 11 COMMUN- 
JTY CAHC rnqulrod Sfiptam- 
her 1982 If poaefble T to bo 
rusnoiialbiu ror developing 
new roursna In axpandlng aec- 
y»n BRd tu an oi Course 
( oiiriu 11 ,IDV ' Cgmtnunlly Core 
^ Anpli, nnts should have 
■Uimlmi bnrknroutid and re- 
lovant l en i'lll, i „ ox nor lance. 

I'liriiis unit dn tul In Trom 
l rlurliitil nt Cnl logo on ra- 

..hut^grldny 4th June.^l/,,; 

WIGAN 

MKT^OPDLITAN DOROUail 

VVIII AN* I.Ol.I.MOK ill* 

Mien Mil. tin v 

I'jirsuiiM Walk. Wltion WN1 


University 

Appointments 


J'CINHTIIIICTION. PohI No. 0 
80 12 44. it, spertallao In 

iirini'lMles mid prartlco of 
iluihlliia Cunlrul urruea o' 
wide I'luiun uf ruursn work. 

Dniinrt iiieiil i*r Muihnnicul 
anil CrMtlm tlmi Eiigliionrlna. 

.. l.LGTUHI'R M P1IODUC- 
HUN r.Nt)INI.i:ltlN« 
niint nn. II 80 3'<t 39 
lu *|iei Inllsl III till* Mold uT 
* 'umiitilni iihlnil Clllll Hour Inn 
will, pnrlbiilar I'efiunncr lo 
CtutipiilnrlseU Nuninrlool Con- 
l i-iil ur Miu'lilnn Ituils. 
HI.I'AII'l'MliNT DF 
I'lKII I.NNIIINAI. 

I'umi Nu. o nu iVi nn 
In i mul, nrrusn n rUHQn nf 
i.iiiii sn work i egulrlna n wide 
uiulm-siitiidliiii t»r. . nysliiniD 
uunlvH* ingnilmr wllll urnrea- 
"Injinl uxpnrlniK'n of cnminor- 
< lullv vlnliln rniiiiMitor uppllcu- 

l.ni'inrni' II _ salary ' wlililn 
l nil lie £64 62 - £10,431 luridor 
I'll view). 

Aim) 1 1 it lull . rorina and 
lurthar iiiirlleuUre . Avnllamu 
I rum Mul rnliirnaliln In iho 
Vice f’l-fnt-fpal. WIub/i Ca lflBO 
i>r Tdchnnluiiy tl tile auovo 

mrrMR r Aat " tBh 

Colleges and 
Departmei^ 

Other Appolnlments 

CLEVELAND 

CDIXEGU of ART AND 

Appl Potions oro . Jhvittid for 
»hV rniinw no costa to start as 


UffiPSR olBQ appoint. 
Play!* CO,umn «"tlmSt 4 re 70 dl«“ 

m^stasEas 

Other Appointments 

CARDIFF 

uniye^tycollege 

ond Laarnlng Problems) 

M Aunusii;a«. 

(German & French) S 

r.tf«?!*,AV!II!S 

ix£S 

foroea. ahould h« for. 

W? S’i 

•n.1 ""S, r,,r,h ;; 

LONDON 

ffi E 0 K N 8ITY “«■«»« 

?S^Fc StP l% B i^VL BT LEC 

M T yV.'( -r- i 1,1 **, ro *' B1 »or S. 
JP* *■8*' 'Colpuf Vlaiun: The 

Theatre ; ,l,UB,on • Darwin 
Thurs'. 3 Juno, Profeseor A. 
5* M. McLean. 'A Univaraltv 
Wmluu °" * l r-L n *! Dangerous 
tHtoriumi Au- 

K .^“^emaek"* VertSft“S • 

Hc , Cit A ?4 m 4^ l 9 0 ) n rr «* 'gfc 


Colleges of . 
Higher Education 

Other Appointments 


Ity to tooch 
melons ona 
if relevant 


ESSEX 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

pS U U r.7s^cl o I OQy°“ h ‘ P "» 

tKt Vf ! 8 Sector Sludfoa 

offered will be a in ■ 
on ah oVh. l !i r . m appoint morn 
on *3t h ■ 8eotDnibar?'i 98 a 'IRS 
■uccessful candidaVo can *ex- 
Cl Lll'or aft Plapad on tho 

d «*a l ?sb 
[s:* E S“l*. ■-«bb* ,^ss 

In2tit A ute\ n ^he|m r "r tBr L.‘i , x ft" 

Cheim.rord 1 aairVaiT^Sfif ! 

^■9 ,n ?380 d ^; : ’^sArJ 

HARROW 

"uWlElf EDLr^3S?Fo^ F 

FaCU, V.c°h f n a o^ 0 n y C " 

School of sciences 
Lecturer I 

HiiiSvaitrai!, 

Jecra* ' ^« Ch,ld t T oro a«b* 

rxnVa p|p S r c 5l^i’ ro n °* a «o 

don WoTglfuno B cfs9‘ p L , QJ " 

plication r form "returnebTa 
within 14 days Tram the 
appearance of this adver- 
llaomant. obtainable from 
tho Principal, Narrow Cal. 

Iobb of Higher Education, 
Northwick park. Harrow, 
Middlesex HA1 3TP Tel: 
P.l-g§4 3422. Ext. 932. 
(38393) 340026 


Adult Education 


WEST GLAMORGAN 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

BRYN HOUSE ADULT 
EDUCATION CENTRE 
Walter Road, Swansea 

HOME BCNOMYcr. 1 " 

Applicants ahould , poa. 
D teaching quallflce- 
tlon. An ability to cantn- 
Jo other couraee, ln- 
New Courses for 
Woman would bn tn 
advontaaa. HoiRry Ccurrint- 
“ 034_ 


Applications snd further 
clotolfo ire available from 
the Director or Education. 
Personnel Sectlbn, Prln- 
aesa Houaa, Princess Way. 
Swansea. Tho aloalna data 


for receipt of oamplatad 
application forma Im Tmijra- 

saf*uH Iam ' 


THE OPEN.UNIVERSITY r J 

PART-TIME TUTORIAL^ 
AND COyHSEILING STAFF 

ApplioaUon8 are Invited for part-time tutorial and 
counselling staff for the 1983 academic yaer. 
Appointments will be made fn the latter part of 
1982 prior to the next academic year which starts . 
In February. 

In 1983 the Unlveruity will be offering 133 courses 
in six faculties: Ms, Educational Studies, .Mathe- 
matics, Science, Social Science snd Technology. In 
addition the Centre for Continuing Education will 
be offering the first In a series of short couran In 
Management starting in September 1983. The 
courses are based on an Integrated structure of 
correspondence assignments, radio and television 
broadcasts and a regionally orgflnUed tutorial and 
counselling system. The time needed forUnlveralty 
duties varies acoortjlng to ipdividual contracts, but 
on average will occupy perhaps bne evening per 
week or Its equivalent for most of the year. Appoint- 
ment of new staff, will In the fir 8 * Instance be . 
teneble for one year, ** 

Vacancies for CoureeTUtors, 

Associate Student Counsellors will m* In ^ 
regions of the oountry. Appljcento should b« 
graduates or graduate equivalent^flecant leaching 
experience In further, adult ?r Wtfwr ffvm Ion fa , 
highly desirable. Existing members of the » Un ver- 
SS?a part-time tutorial and oounselllng ateffjrtll be 
sent application forms during May aa a matter of • 
epurse. The number ofappoIntmenUofn^stoff 
may. therefore, be somewhat reatrloted and wiU 

vary bBtween courses and regions,.. - 

To obtain BppHcatiori'fomw and " 
a POSTCARD to the Tutors- Office (TJ.^ine 
OM U&PJ( box 82, W<l(on HA.M ; iton : .v 

Keynes, MK7 6 AU.I, "< 

..... ..knmilnh In rnnsW^hed for " 


LONDON 

INNER LONDON 

rau¥^^Vu l iV4' 0, ' ,T,Y 

EDUCATfON INSTITUTE 
°'"<PParloi( Hoad, N. 1 

KTJffli" 1 and '»HI have a 
■aochlno cnoimilmont uf 6 
houra per week. 

-Applleaioni are Invited 
with qua). 

Si!fiUiS ni ."'i 11 axoarloncf, of 
8 adults, togathar with 
Efibjo araenlaatlonal ability, 
JJ5 V I®U» Mpcrjiuicn of penal 
feline would , bo on edvon- 

vvi!S l0 ^ur 8 n^i°n? 

Orado II £6.462 - £ 1 Q ,4i l ¥ 
London Allowance. 

nun I ml -17 pulnt depanda un 
nuall ricationa ond exporlanca. 

•iBUnce mey bw a Ivon io- 
worde houaeliold removal ax- 

PPTIADI, 

*PPly to the Senior 
Admlnlatratlvo O/ricor. Islino- 
i?r n n^ 'ft*«* , i u,a *. ShopporiDn 
**?*•*. Nl (nr fur, hoc detail, 
an, l upnllL-atlon form (.mcIob- 
Ji<tt .1 foolBcai. BAE. Ckoelna 
,Q “ ” 4tB 

fly smpioyor" rWi^SISSKAi 


HAMPSHIRE 
SCHOOL HAn,> ALnw,, “TH 
ROb'J 6 , HA <IV ’ naall,, «'t«kn. 

Jp« ,n 'WM n i« * Edural Inn War- 
den rnqulrcd will) effnrl from 
lat hoptonilirr 1082. or i, 
““ oosnlr.le. Inr 

VTlila-'g will rorni*.' 

fn *l(*al(lll*l I (Ml 

In (mpifinbcr. Tlirlvlnu F E 

5m!? , sT' nt ' fI ' K Lein urir : 

S.A.E. pinnae fur lob dc- 
acrlpllon. Lettnr of apullra- 
JJ on i c.v. plur* tt rafernriH to 
Hpadiueetor, (30322) -3B0000 


SURREY 

|PE"*TffJSKE c 5ttW T TT “ 

Londun 

Frlnna Alluwnnrn, 

* r “ Invited fur 
th« £?•?.' Aren Omarilaer In 
Ad.ifl r,f ‘h 1- lorue 

rronv bflpfemOcr 1982 or r« 

W ° An ifiTf f ,?. 8 ,? 1 b L 15 , / , premii*r. 

Applicants ihoulij |»n mile,, 
Qbly quBlirte<l nnU DiLparli^nriifl 
lir " d “‘“Hon Xh a nrir. 
Honor 'kL^C. ft , u rep J j ,rf,n,u ‘ 

QSeSISL Ve'WRfton form. ■ 

•™ir a 'r • r " , ~ »■ 


UNIVERSITY OF EAST ANGLIA 
Norwich 

ENGLISH 

LANGUAGE TUTOR 

Applications are Invited for the above post In the 
Centre for Overseas Student Programmes, for 
™ i 3 , arod , 5 July to 3 September, 1982. 
Candidates should have a TEFL qualification and 
experience particularly with students from the 
Islamic world. Accommodation, though not 
Included in the salary, will be available on the 
campus If required. Salary on the scale £5,550- 
£6,070 per annum equivalent, accordlna to 
experience. 

Applications, together with the names of two 
referees, should be sent to the Director. 
Centre for Overseas Student Programmes 
University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ, 
by 31 May. 



DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION ' 

Health Education Unit 

HEALTH EDUCATION 
IN INITIAL TEACHER EDUCATION 

Applications are invited for TWO RESEARCH FELLOWS to 
(SunoS* * thrae * year funded by th© Health Education • 

The work of tire project wtt be based on research currency 
baing^undartakan by the Diractor, Mr. Trefor WUHams. The 
project team will devefop and evaluate material and strategies 
In cooperation wflh tutors of B.Ed. and PGCE courses. 

UtehopBd{o a pp°l n lf or September 1982 but a start In January 
1983 could be considered. • 7 

8alaiywHl be within the range £6,070 to £10,576 and second- 
ment will be negotiated if requested. 

Further particular* may be obtained Uom Mrs. E. C. P. 
Seare, The University. Southampton 809 5NH. to whom 
application! (3 copies from United Kingdom applicants) 
should be sent not later than 16 June, 1682. p tease quote 
reference No. 752/A, . . . . . H 


PEMBROKE COLLEGE 
OXFORD 

Invites applications for a 

SCHOOLMASTER/SCHOOLMISTRESS 

STUDENTSHIP 

Tenable at the Coifege In Trinity Term 
1983. The Student will reside in College as 
a member of the Senior Common Room 
In order tp pursue the study of his/her. 
8Ubjeqt; ". 

Intending candidates should write for 
particulars to: The Senior Tutor, 
Pembroke College, Oxford 0X1 ID W* 
Tho closing date for applications is: 30lh 
September, 1982. •*, 




Itfil 

c I >x, 

■ ! 1 
-. ‘ "i s \ p 
l- • . •* . ' 

I.-)’ !•’ V 


il I* i - 
* lLKj&.'i 


r.'VVL 

yaw 

i ‘i '-‘V. 

■' ^ & 

M 

iiis 


to one u' l i'“ ' L'inlr 
Friday, 18th June, 1982. 


• r-jy. 

'i.» 

. J rlfsTj 





-! i '• • 


: .! 1 • 


ADULT EDUCATION 

cnnMnucd 

LINCOLNSHIRE 

AREA TUTOR FOR 
ADULT EDUCATION 
tiPALIUNU/IKlLnEACII/L* 
ONQ SUTTON 

Lecturer II ({S4fi'i-CI043l 
p.H.i pay award pendlnfl 

Required nl Sir Jolin 
G lend Bny«* Secondary 
School, .Spalding. Canill- 
ilatee should have nxporl- 
enco In prnvldlnn uaiilt 
education courtex uml be 
qua llflad lo teach (ana day 
per week) In a aoroiularv 
school. The Aren Tulur 
will bn reapuunlblo fur the 
iirnanlnatUin and acl minis ■ 
iraLlun ur adult education 
bused on lliree main ron- 
Ires In snrunclnrv srluiols 
liikI a number of ninull U«- 
turlieil mures. 

Application furms illlii 
further nartUiilar" from 
County l-.ilucutlon Officer 
(Kef. FWPJCI County 
orricea. NowlaitU. Lincoln. 

Closing dale IBlh June. 
1983. (46346) 380000 


Youth and 
Community Service 

BIRMINGHAM 

WKHTIIII.L COLLKfll-: . 
•felly Oak. IHi- in Inn hum HI!!) 
GLL 

Principal: Alnn U. Unrafcrd 
J.P.. lion. M.A.. M.liil . . 


^.P. .^Ilon. M.A.. M.liil. . 

TUTOR IN COMMUNITY* 

AND VOUTH WORK. 

(Half time fur one year) . 
Applications are invited from 
suitably qua lined and eMperl- 
enrnd candidates for this post 
to work with a team of tutors 
In the Community and Youth 
Work Department enoaoed In 
training students for CY . 
CQSW, B. Ed. and Diploma 
qualifications. 

Thn Depurtinnnt is actively 

concerned to develop the 
irnlnlno of persons for work 


In n mull I -cultural suclaty. 
Field workers with osperLenca 
of training are Invited to 


i i i ; 

?-* .r-v. 


"?fc appointment will ba 
Wlt)i afflict from 1st Septem- 
ber. 1982. nnd at the Lectur- 
er II. point B level on the 
Burnham FE Salary Seal a. 

Cluelnu dale for applica- 
tions: 4th June. 1983. 

Further detulle of tha post 
nnd mode or application may 
bo obtained from the Princip- 
al. (39417) 440000 


BRADFORD 

CITY OF DRADFORD 
METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 
YOUTH * COMMUNITY 
EDUCATION OFFICER 
(TRAINING) 

Huulbury Senior Officer 

TiHiioa 

Points 3-7 (£10,873 - 
£1 3.129 p.a.l 

Aiipllcutlous are luvltud fur 
this post from parsmin wllh 
ralovnnt nxiierlnnrn who have 
nn appruprlutn yuiitli nnd 
rtiuiniiltiilv wurk. tom hum nr 
uiadnmlc qiiu Ilf iritlf mi. 

. The person nPMOlntad Will 
be n member of a inom nr 
Blnlit Officers who ere re- 
sponsible for tlis promptlnn 
or education, nodal end ro- 
crnetlonnl . opportunities for 


S&ij 




n r tralnfnn. youth 
on end snarlne in 
itonel end etlvlewr 
the Snrvlcii- empi 




■nel end advisory work of 
...o Snrvlcn. EMpnrlsiica of 
wamliint tretnina courses 
far unemployed you no people 
wilt be an adyamnoo. 

An nsaentlal ussr car nllu; 
WHnae is. payable and BBsietnu 
enr purchase Is eppuaeble. .. 


tite ,■ 


of Rduceiionn 
Mpor. Pro vine 
ket B treat, 

lEfrfhnHI 

Bradford 

mmr ixv 


KBNT 


[s ‘ an Eit uni 

L ttd 


Dill ECTOR 


LONDON 
INNER LONDON 
EDUCATION AUTHORITY 
VOUTH WORKERS 
jNt: Holurlns anti minlldi'm 
Qualified salary "rales 
Incluillmt Lon dun Allowance 
Brule 2: £630 7 - £7701 
Sen la 311: £8 134 • £803(1 
Appointment* will lie tu *li»- 
sorvlcn of tha AulluiiTty: with 
sorondinent for ull itiroi* 
posts. 

Asalstnnrr may he ulveii to- 
ward* limwehohl i-onioval us- 
penses. 

Details and rurms return- 
able by 4 June t!IH2 from ilm 
Education Officer . ICEC.3I 
Tint County linll. SE 1 7 I'D. 

(Stamped addressed (niilmnii 
envelope). 

I. HAWK STONE YOUTH 

LLIIR 

■lavvksliuii' linll. Km mi I mil on 
Rond. MK1 
Salary Hrnlr 311 
(4 rn I or Youth Worker re- 
quired 111 lend a tcniii »f nil 
Asslntunt anil ■•art-tUiin vnutli 
worker" for ihln modern nnd 
well-estuhllnlind r'hrlMt lail- 
bani'ri Club ailni'hntl to 
CiirlaU-luiri-li and Upton 
Cliapel lit Ncirlh I.unihnth. 
There ralale a qrent ileal ul 
scope for the axle ilaluii of the 

I trnnniit mime uf activities end 
t*r I he worker to develop 
skills within the team pron- 
ranimn. The post will pre- 
dominantly Involve the over 
1 4 *b nnd the divnloiouunt nf 
this uruup tli rough in ikIiiII- 
huad. 

It Is rinslralilo ilial the 

S orkar should lie n cunmilttuil 
nr 1st lan. 

3. ST JOHN'S YOUTH CLUB 
lliinmii Terrain. Nf 
Sain rv scale 2 

You III work it ri-iiulred to 

assist the tnulnr worker In 
tllli nninlmi iui.1 development 
uf a yuiitli proiiramiiin. The 
Centre Imili ofinra a I mill- 
llnnel youth i'IiiIi Mniilna anil 
Is liauvlly com nil t ted tu pro- 
viding a daytlmn riemirrii fur 
tha yoimn unemployed. 

Tli« M mi au anient Commit- 
lea Is nbla tu ufTer asslnlancit 
with accommodation. 

Visits to tha club arranged 
through Ronnla McEWan 01- 
359 6434. 

3. SAMUEL L1T1IGOW BOYS' 
CLUB . . 

Stanhopa St., Camilon. NWI. 
Salary scale 311 
Experienced and qualified 
Senior Youth Workar ra- 
qulrod far this now position 
offering opportunltlea to do- 
valop a proarammn nf activi- 
ties and events In and uut of 
tha club. 

ILEA Is an ogiiiil opportuni- 
ties employer. (38883) 440000 


NORTHAMPTONSHIRE 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

ADVERTISEMENT FOR 
TWO COMMUNITY 
YOUTH WORKER/ 
ORGANISERS 

_ Applications era invited 
from qualified and experi- 
enced persona for the 
above posts. Ono to bs 
baaed ill Wrlilnnhurouflh 
with the Eastern team end 
ono near Towmiicr with 
tli a Southern team . Each 
team . Is responsible Tor 
pruvldlnn u ciimprnhnnaive 
prim mill inn nf Bpclnl 
aUucatlmt In nil yuuny peo- 
ple In l linlr iircn and thn 
einiihnsln nf the post Is 
working 'In tin* riald'. 

Dii ties will Iticliidti de- 
vil lup ■■■ nut uf project", 
irnlnlno evnms mid Invulv- 
Itiil . yiiunv people nnd 
adults in uraaMlslna Hie 
prournmntb. 

>.f“irSsB JtS.A.'KK? 

g Further del alls and op- 
llenttim rurms froini* 
ounty Education n nicer, 
Community YcmiH Horvlco. 
Floor 5. Northampton 
3 lift* 0 ' Northampton NN 1 

, Cluslng tlam fur applica- 
tions l« two wnoka after 
Ilia apFHroniiD or iliia 
udvarllaemniit. (3H01 0) 


OXFORDSHIRE 

ifr^BriUcJATiON 


NORTHUMBERLAND 

III.XIIAM (Jirr.EN 
F.I.I/.AM'.TlI 111(111 
Whrtsliino llrliliii* ltd. 

Hr ilia lit NK4A AJI) 

Group 12. 13 • IN . 

I 'omprchnimlvr . Ill 1 .3 pupil" 
liichidlini 26 II In Sixth I uriji - 
('■mi m mill V Tutor Mi a In llur- 
nliiiin II. (Juullllril tnsi-hci- rr- 
iiiilvril tu ilrvnlop tin* Coin- 
mutilly rnln el tlir nrlieul. 
Tin. rutur will lm an inipiir- 
lant incinlirr el a train run- 
slstlmi uf Deputy Read K'ein- 
muni tv I . thn Tiller, and fell* 

I I me niiiillfli'd Yuiitli l.radcr. 

ull rnspniixlbln le tlir llrail- 

■ii as ter. 

Wurk Is varied, til" Innm 
him it N iiunslhlllt v for nmervl- 
slen nnd tilt ( ilti nl Y'eillU 
Ak"i>l ini lens In tie* SiUmd, III 
t lie town ( 'einninnlit > 'i-itlre. 
uiiil lu Hie t lllnip** el lie* 

■’ ill i-lnnriil Ul el (lie Si heel. 

Youth prevision ler tonne nn- 
oinpliiveil Imv Iw-'i-enn- In* 
<-rea«lcinly nniniil whilst re- 
('■11111111 iiintni't with veliiiitniv 
oni'inlsntluiis nenaln an Ini- 
■•nrtiint part el the week. The 
■■riinulnitlnii and linprevriiii-iit 
of Ihr Adult Lilui nt lim prevl- 
■ lell I" umxlinr area of rr- 
apeilslhllll v. 

Thin In n (In mn ml I mi lull and 
1 lie Authority would wish In 
nppnlni setnreiin wlm Is prr- 

I iarnil to wnrk In the nvrit. 
nn". to asnlunnllv at 

weekend" anil "i-liuel liullilay 
periods. 

Anpllriillon forms ii vail utile 
frnili llm lieuilmastiT. Clnnlnn 
dntn IDth June. 1!IH2. 


NOTTINGHAMBHIUE 

(T)lfNTY hCIIIlT 
(.'OUNCII, 

III •'iMlIeiirtleii with 

N< > f TINIill AMHIII II li 
COUNTY COUNCIL 
(l)lrni:tiir nf l.el"ure 
Scrvli o"> 

llonulre n Cuunty Benin 
Oraanlscr. (Jualiftod In 
Y'outh 3 Community wnrk. 
Knowledge of tha Scout 
Movement aisontlal. Salary 
Scale JNC Hongs 3 Points 
2 to O. Tasks undertaken 
will Include support for 
Broutino nistrlrts. oroa- 
nlsntlon mid activities. 

Applications In writing 
by 3th June 1983 with full 
C.V. to:- Tins Snrrotary. 
Not llnnlianiahlro Scout 

Council. North Church 
Htrnot, NolUiiuhain NG1 
JUG. Marking envelope 
"Organiser". (47907) 

440000 


OXFORDSHIRE 

i ■« MIN I Y COUNC IL 
t'eiuiniliillt rilurallnit Seiviir 
smith tlxfei-ilsliln- Aien 
!■-■ I 

si-.Nuiu rti nm 
iu roii 

a new r «per I mo n tit I prnleit I* 
lii'lll'l "el up le oiler Lite nii'l 
Net lal Skill" and navel lair, I 
trill n I mi lu yiiiiim iireple nn 

f .INi' I mull'd "ilieme" In kimlli 
lalerdshliT . We m-r leeklnu 
fee 3 npproprlmrlv iiimllfird 
■lenple wllh liuaillll'lllen, 
drlvii, and l■■lller"lamlll1•l le 
not up the prelect mn> pi me 
III bn a UM'drl fur hilnrr • 
vnlel'inniil" III Osfuritnhlrr 
We rnnnlre I.H A Srnler 
Tiller te lend and develop the 
IM-n)er I . vv lie will he paid 
wllllln .INI' Union- IV (III A 
Life mill Si" ini Skill" I liter I" 
n""l"t l» all nsperts ill the 
dev I'lepmi'llt ill llie I're le, I. 
wile will hr paid nn INI* ll 
■ Mld-l'i'lull came. I" lie 

|||■|M•l■lll■lelltM will hr lelllnllv 
I v ear • end m I" . 

I iil'llier del nil" ■ nn hr 
ehlitlurd frem tlir I lilel 
t.dm alien (lirh-er. Mm r|rv. 
field lieuar . New lliiml, l>« • 
ford. Tel: (isfind 111*214 

( 'liisliiii ilnlr fur ai'plli Mien" 
UJIli Jinir. IIIH'J. (s.n.r. 
|i|eii"nl 131141)3 1 4 4 iltliltt 


THK II MI'S KDUC 
WEST YORKNIIIIIE 

l.lll l NVYIIIHt VIUi I |( ANIl 
ITIMMI'NII V I I N Dll 
Weed l.mir, 111 adieu), lllvj 
1 A H Weal Yi'ikvlili n 
S iU'fll ANIl I HMMI’NIIY 
\V ■ III K 1 II 

fnrsl- I 1,1(11 p.a i n Intel 

l p*|nh I 

A Youth mill t ■■inninnld 
H'llkri lllll|. Ilmel la rr >■ nil n,| 

t*v tirnrn w e,i,l ('eiiiuinnilv 
A "sin Ini toil Tlir I'miie h 

Purpose - hill 1 1 and in n eilseij 
■*r " hleiil ml area. I hr peraoii 
Hi|" '111 I r .1 will he rr "|ionslt>lr 
In l||e Mnenilrllleiit « « ■■■mill - 
ter el tlir ( rnli r anil will 

V rrf I- ralil v hr a •iii'illllnl 
' enlli am| I 'eiiiiiiunl I v Wm k- 
rr. Ira. her. or lielil n Urgrer 
• II 1 1IPl'M'in "I a Sei lal S, |ril, r 
■ ni nils 

lie* p""l la eprn nii-u 

mill wemrn 

Tlir nppoliiluirin In i]ir 
fit"! IiisIiiiii e In itll*tl .Y)"l 
Mm ■ li I '*11* mi'l I" Tiiii, I ni lit 
Ihr I i i,iiiniiiit iv |‘a oitr.i iilmr . 
All"i Ull* ilnlr llie pi.vl will 
lie • .iii*I, | r i ril lei luuillim hs 
the I in al AiiUieillv 

I'Im«Iiiii .lair I rhlav .lline 
I Ull I'lilj 

I in I Tie i lnrni Mint leu nvnll- 
nlilr (nun the Y'eutli iiml 

( in 1 1 n 1 » v I iliiint leu fiffli r. 

)•■ llie Wuel I vi limine. Mm* 
hr I 'ill re I . Iti ml fin ■ I It 1 1 I I 1.1. 
I Telephone Ilf it JA41III 

I rill'll el npplli alien null 


ational SUPPLEMENT 2I.5JJ 
w * vorkbiurk 

"f-mjEN blUnciE TRADES 

Sax 

v:p.‘^ h sa5 F •- M h i!&“ 

xs i«h «1!S,ISSS» l o a r r t 0n i«». 

lunnagerlnl axparlenc*' 4 *«ll, 

lilli-innt In llsvalaniV.^ Bn, l *n 
me,u I nt t latlvos ,° PlnB Bni »'o». 
halnry >C ole J.N.C 3 

lie* PnijaVl *nd Bl ih^ P nhi l,lJ- 

urhnu Aid funded h? 0 ^ 11 

dr r dills' CaunSf. 110 " w ‘‘^* 

Jr,” 1 " AyStle *Stalk, P v l V ,, H 


Overseas 

Appointments 


CIIHIHTIAN TEACHEHH 
i S n" ,, *«?lr , " P mid 0 ^ 
t r -^M , |!r ,,T1,,IM W «K- VMnaSS; 


■ nppu. "ii.'ii nun « ■■ nil nun Inn work 

■ in Ih ilium v|tnr m ||r "•■n< In tnui*. Voluan v 

Mr ll. Il■d'lll«l■ll. *1. 1 1 1, II ml - Viiiiintnnr ... , 

win nl. Mum brail lane Mitp. Miivnmtii, Hhanlii ,,l ? ni *T 

l"V. 111*1 H 4 II* I I nlruin.iir l.emhm rnlnM "WSL 
lllil It'll.llllll 1 443611 > 4 .1111)110 I All. (1 6380) y * ”**4^0 


. )E 3 HUAL 

We rnquli 
ax parlance 

tfo 

). 11 


LU 

prnf agalpiiaHy 
d quallftaa i>nr< 

nn 


Richmond Upon flumes Education Commutes 

Appointment of Principal 

Richmond Adult College 

Cur rwt Salary in tha rang* of . 

£16,917 — £1 7,946 InctUBlv* ot 
Outer Londofi Aliowane* . 

' ; AppiloaHons are Invited for \he. appointment pf prinoipai of th^ 

, . Group 4 Adult Education Cplloga. Tha vacancy arlapa from tha 
• ' :reHrpmwi of the prti$$rvt Princlpal. Mre p. M. Laello^ ,^BE- ; 
-Tiw:’colleaa, : .8 main full Uma base Ip WcfilDonO, and a new 
' addHlonal fuH Umobase ahoul to be cteve^jpAd k\ Twlbk©nhahi, 
Offers a full range Of day and evening non- vocational courses In 
. ; epprQximataly 4fl. centres and bulstatlons across. the Borough. 

■ Sc^ie’Oh subf^efs at QCE 'O’ and A' level !are ateo offered, 

" togetf'ef -Wltti'a smalierhunribeVdfvooalk>ra1 bourses mtrihty in 
the secretarial and langUAg* Saida. The odUege has at present 
;■ some ;l4,00p indtvfdual students on. Ha role. , • v • : ; J _ 0 • - 
! Oandldaies must be able to demonstrate a strong cdmmKmeht 
tp adult adubaikm, and must have a successful reoofd at aehldr 
level. In adult education of a afoaely^retated field. ' t ;• ;• 
j Further particular* and application forth* returnable by It , 
diHte from D1 rector of: Education, Refcal HoM 
UiKton Road, ^ TWfckeiiham, WWdleaex Twi ^ k 


WIGAN 

MI'.THOI'DI.ITAN IUIRCIUI.il 
OF WIGAN 

Y'OUTII SFIlVICi: 

(ialrvvnv lliiiini'. k)iiuill"hnnir. 
YV luan 

Y'OUTII WOIIKF.lt 
Rdiiilmil as necin ns ptisnlhli*- 
»n <*x par I" II cad iinrniiil wile 
has "ntlafncltirlly i iiniplctril n 
full Mints Vi mi ih W Wnrk Irnln- 
Inu ruuran or holilx n 
Teaching quullflrat Ion. Yen 

will havo uvorslglit of two 


maintained youth rlnl>s In 
lllndloy and Lalgh and innrlul 
responsibility In asnlstlni) the 


co-ordination of monnuron fur 
thn young unemployed In 
Wlnnn Authority. 

Salary within ranqe 3 ul 

JNC £7135 - £7903. 

Application furinn ami 
furtllar ourtlrularx iivullulilr 
from and rntiirnnbln le tlir 
Director of Edurntlun nt tlir 
abuvn address. Closloii dale: 
11 tli June, I HH2 . (3U05A t 


Area Youth 
Organiser 

£ 9,171 - £ 10,317 p.a. 

Applicants for this post for the Kerrler District of 
Cornwall, based at Camborne, should be suitably 
qualified and experienced persons. 

The above salary Is within the Soulbury Main 
Range points 2-6. 

Application forms and further details may be 
obtained on receipt of a stamped addressed 
envelope from the Secretary for Education, 
Room 207, County Hall, Truro, Cornwall 
TR1 3BA. 




i 

Cornwall 


Education Department 

County Youth and 
Community Officer 

.Ul, 121-412, 531 

(Youth arid Community Service Officers 
Senior Range, Points 4-8) - 

This is the principal officer post of the County Youth 
and Community Service on the Island and applicants 
must be qualified Youth Leaders with proven 




field, We are seeking to appoint from 1 September,' 
1982j or earlier by arrangement. 

The postholder will be responsible fdi; ihe effective 
organisation and Co-ordination of thotervlcc within ■ 
and related lo the larger community a^d the 
supervision of 5 Arta Youlh and Community Officers. • 
- Assistance with removal to this attractive location 
(maximum £S00) will be paid in appropriate cases. The 
post carries aq essential uscr car ffliowanci, 1 
Application form and further details from the County ' 
Personnel Officer, County Hall, Newport (Tel: . 

0983-524031,^x1. 127). 

Qqsingdate:3 June. . . 



Education Department 

Youth and 
Community 
District Leader 

(2 posts) 

Salary: Soulbury Main Range 3-7 
£9,999 to £1 1 ,088 inclusive 

Applications are invited for two posts offering varied and 
responsible experience al senior level. Casual user car 
allowance. 

Application forma and further particular* available 
from Director of Educational Services, Town Hall, 
Frlern Barnet, London Nil 3DL. Tal: 01-368 1255, 
ext. 22S. Reference: ADM/E/283/264. Closing date: 
June 4th, 1982. 


London Borough of Barnet 


EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 

FULL-TIME YOUTH WORKER 

£7,155 — £7,995 + E498 LW 
•i- Casual Car Users Allowance 

A vacancy will arise on 1 August 1982 al Youth Centre 21 as s 
result ol an application from the existing post holder kh. 
retirement undor the DBparlmont of Employments Job release 
sciiomo. Applications are therefore Invited from suitably quuuM 
college leavers, unemployed poreona or porepne under noticed 
redundancy. Others In employment cannot bo cofiswe/eo, 
Youth Centro 21 Is a mnlnlolnod conlre et Ihe WeBlem part of ihe 
Borough and hae a varied programme ol actltWlea win ■ 
eubatantinl numbor ol volunlary londora os well as a 
complemonl ol paid part ilmo atalf. 

Tho post carrioa rnsponglbilliy for iho day to day 
Iho Conlre logotiior with memborahlp of Iho Auuwwa 
profosaionol team In a developing Youth and Community Bervfce. 
Conaldermlon will lie given to aeslelonce with removal ana 
expenses. . 

Application form* and further deleft* from: The Dlreoww 
Education, Tha Grova, Carahallon, 8urray. Tel: 01 -Ml 
Closing date: 9th June, 1992. 

LONDON BOROUGH OF 



Education 

SOUTH BEDFORDSHIRE 
' TRAINING CENTRE, LUTON 

Deputy Manager 

Department has eatebltahed a new Tralntng C en^B , ^ 

“A** 

Salary £1 1,296— £12,691 subject to i«Won. ' 

The appointment wJH be made tor 1 2 m ^ 8 ! 0 p,jncip«l 
InetflJYM wilh a salaiy acqle end oondillons m 
Lecturer |n Further ErtjeaBon. BdUBitlon .; 

Applloetlon forme obtainable from |J*®gjL ^95222 
oSflcjr. County Hill, B««0fd. Telephona 9*"°™ . 

(raf. FB0 1). Cloalng date 9lh June, 1#9Z __ 


lf*nuNTYCQUNGIL 


J1.U ri-liflin't ; .f, .1 OHM iHHkir Ji 1 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


OVERSEAS 

conttnuod _ 

CYPRUS 

rxACH IN CYPRUS AND 
Ihe middle east 

More tlian n Ihnununrt 
Hisiher" Tor all "ubjorta mid 
□r.dea will bn ruqiilrod from 
Srimary 1° nnlvaaliy lovola. 
5oSd p(*». nfI R»K. warm (-11- 
iBte and (lotltl nmpliiyninnt 

C °For tl doiall* nf how lo run- 
omployni'x. ijlnusn xi-nil 
oound pout w I iirdnr In 
aSc. P.O. !»"* 37 U. Niro- 
«i«. Cyprus. If y«»»i find ilii* 
ir far uiioci I'tu.ihi.' and imi 
ih. mo*l iuniLlM'nHlvn nitniiiN 

IS conlnrliillt nmploy ni'H, 

qIqbbb write In nn Nuyliiu wliv 
End returning tin* lit 1*1111 ore 
we Tiavo haul you. W.- *>,1111 
r,f un d your nioiujv In** 30 
dencB for piwUmi* till . 
fill? SB > 4600011 


DENMARK 

Sr'LJffi'Y. 

vassa.^ ‘ h® 

HO a'i! , V 4 - r ?4 y»ar« 01 

with nt Iflust a v«nrl° E. oro . B 

rofnrri ,Vc T » "a b Voon 

ConunhaS"' "nSrSK? 11 *^ 

4c ,,o i5k !»#«!* nssssssas 

Dwio.i ,i rk. 


SPAIN 

400000 


Greece 

hk. ^SSS^SS 

Mr^jK^S^V. and- ?*°t» 

I?n Street. V«fnitl- 

TbI: 30 1 3477fV440 , 4l, AthoM ' 



HONO KONG 

p 5 ? 3 &Srm~ 

an advantan. col }J* **nfiunoa 


ITALY 

ii£Bw&vr c "‘ R 


TEACHER* n ^ ltlNCE 

FS?W/M WSS r. .883 

BOO. ' Tll “ to, »l onrofmont la 
AROUSE MOTHER to 


vision*' "SS *?"'IIbm thVnlpqr” 
_" n d .rare of log flrla 


I0H IS - ii™u ’ lou Blrla 

-‘i fST'.-S: ” M ' 

furthar ,hB ^ 

Mfchaolina O'Dwyar S/arv r 

S) ^nis r tVJj*S5 r , f 


ph“h*r***hV"iraa( 

Wrfhai* data l 
Mlchaalina O'ri 




EeyEn« Language 

Teaching Scheme 


The KELT Scheme Is part of Britain’s 
programme of aid lo developing countries 
under which ELT specialists serve in key 
posts In 40 countries. Further 
applications are Invited for the following 
posts: 

EGYPT 

3 EIT Consultants 


Centre for Developing 
EnjNeh) La nguag e Teaching 

Faculty of Education, 

Ain Shams University, 
Heliopolis, Cairo. 

Reference: 82 K 27-29 
Dutlss: As part of a team of 7 KELT 
Officers the Consultants will be 
responsible for curriculum outreach in the 
National University, for pre-service 
training. The Consultants will observe, 
asaa! and evaluate use of curriculum 
materials already produced for first 2 
years In faculties of education; develop 
meihodcloflles, and perhaps mnlerials, 
lor 3rd and 4th year courses; assist local 
■ wueaguas In leaching course; conduct 
workshop training; and report lo Senior 
consultant on the outreach prolecl. 
i ijvw!*ii Qua, lfloatlon: MA In Applied 


a jdallGS and 10 years experience, 
-S?]S..P vor800a ant * teacher training, 
pm familiarity wllh university lovol 
eduoauen In Britain. A PhD nnd 
S^Wge of Arabic an advantogo. 
Salary: E9.9B0-E 13.895 per annum. 

2 ELT Consultants 
(Training), 

Wftfir Developing 
fngiitth Language 
Teaching (CDELT), 

Ffoul^ of Education, 
fin, Shame Unlvoraity, 
Heliopolis, Cairo. 

Reference: 82 K 30-31 

pa f?> ,he obov ® laam tea 

SiSS 8 ? u I*. 0 rosponslbfe lor 
JJJurtkin. with Univorsily nnd Ministry 
ffijoftefldutaelorta-eervicB 

EriSiJiK^ ll v£ f0duca P ikJt lraln,n S 
Si fSS* wllhln nnd 
revise malerfala; train 

inftw^T5 flriQl8 flnd evaluate materials 
amended usa. 

w!5teL2 u !d ,flc f ,,on,: m ln 

5 u V 0ara overseas 

KiSS« a i >d i , ? acher lrain lng experience. 
’ BHW Fg'AwfclO an advantage. 

\ ^,735-£ 10,785 per annum. 

KtiK 

Afooly Educ0 tlon, 
University, 
Heliopolis, Cairo. 

ffi renco:82K32 

‘ a KELT team the 

; rasponslbie tor the 

SS p,QI ™ for 

SfoSS,S2!lS ,a lw P r °f a93| 6nal training. 

" -Wwani will: leach English 



Language competence end TEFL 
pedagogy course for up to 10 hours a 
rtjJS} fij' 1 ?? and counsel trainees on 
teaching practice: be Involved 
with course admirdatratlon and relevant 
materials production. 

8psclal Cfimllfloatlons: MA In Applied 


Reference:' 82 K^I 



an advantage. 

Salary: £8.735-£1 0.785 per annum. 

PAKISTAN 

Adviser to 
English Department 
Allama Iqubal Open 
University, Islamabad. 
Reference: 82 K 20 

Dulles: To assist In identifying potential 
audiences and producing and evaluating 
distance learning courses for English 
Lanuage: to help, In collaboration with 
other agencies where appropriate, to 
design courses, curricula and enures 
outlines for the teaching of English 
Language to distance learners: lo assist 
In the design, writing and production of 
broadcast and other support materials; to 
advise on the uae of English Language 
by other departments In^ English medium 
courses; to cooperate in the running of 
workshops concerned with the teaching 
of language. • >, . 

Special Qualifications: MA In 
Curriculum Development with a one year 
postgraduate qualification in. TEFL or MA 
In appropriate field of Applied Linguistics 
and experience In the developing world, 

S ily the Indian Subcontinent, 

g experience In distance learning, 
materials production and in-8Brvfce 
training. 

Salary: E6.080-E1 3.895 per annum. 

MALI 

ELT Adviser, 

Instltut Pedagoglque 
National, Ministry of 
Education, Bamako. 

Reference: 82 K 8 

FT Tin 
Francqpb 

Further applications are Invited for the 
following post which is funded under 
Britain's programme of aid to ELT Irp 
FrancophoneAfrtaa: 

UPPER VOLTA* 

ELT Adviser, 

Ministry of National 
Education, ^Ouagadougou. 


Duties; To advise the Ministry of 

^H 1 0n . on J ELT . polk3,eB ' m0 teodB and 
materials; to develop ESP courses for 
civil servante and publto sector 
employees, including a minimum of 6 
hours teaching; (o promote English by 
ga p programmes In liaison wlUi Radio 
Mall and develop supplementary 
programmes and correspondence 
materials, including support services for 
teachers of English In rural areas. 

8peoIal Qualifications: 5 years 
experience In ESP and teacher training, 
Including experience In Afrioa. Prevtoul 
. experience ol English t» Radio an 
advantage. Goodknowfedge ot French 

8alery: El 1 .195-E13.89B per annum. 

SUDAN 

Leoturer In English 
Language Teaching 
Methodology, . 
intermediate Teacher 
Training Institute, 

Madhlya/ . . 

Omdurman and the 
Women's Teacher Training 
Institute, Omdurman. 

Reference: 82 K 26 
Duties: in coordination wfih KELT 
Consultant to be appointed lo Ihe 
Ministry of Education who will be 
responsible- for the revision of the 
Intermediate 8chool Teacher Training 
Syllabus and Secondary School 
examinations; te teach ELT Methodology 
lo teacher trainees In both Cottegae for a 
combined total ot 12 hours per weak; to 
supervise and mark teaching practice; to 
set examinations; and- te train a 
counterpart. 

Special qualifications: 3 years teacher 
training experience overseas, preferably 
in a similar developing country, and ' 
experience of preparation of teacher 


iiqunuiy oj inuii ■ ■ 

Salary: E8.735-E1 0,769 per annum. 


W HVBW* I» 

Inatfon of 


ana poorainBiion of upper Volta's teacher 
(reining prdgamme In IfaJaon with the 
University, of Ouagadougou and the 
Insfflut National da I'Eduoallon; to 
develop the proper end foil use of tha 
University’s language laboratory which 
the Britten Government haa presented to 

• — -j-,- iw- nbj R>Mmmmq. 


inti DJTlftHf UVYBiiiiireJu moo fflowiww iu 

1 the University under the aid programme. 
Special Qualfic&tlofls: 5 years ELT 
experience overseas, Including some 
advisory and teacher training experience. 
Fluent French essential,- . •: 

Salary; E9,55(K1fi< 7S5 P® 1 annum. . 


with a Briilah eduoa^rf ba^gJo^ 1 ^ a i(owa«te8'-bQCOfdlng to - 

Benefits: MwyfMOfi ^KJ^SSeteohlklren’s education allowance 

Closing date for appl|wt^. 7 Jim piegjte write, quoting the post ' 

For furthordrtjJ* *nd ' “rfffo^WiTKoaUonal Appointments 

ftfYT • l ' ' SMIWI lt * fcSga<a 


THE BRITISH SCHOOL 
OF BRUSSELS 

(Upper School) 

invites applications for September 
tor the. joint position of 

Head of History and Careers 

or for the post of 

Head of History 

or for the post of 

Head of Careers 
with some History teaching 

■la^ppS 83 8°° d M gufdancs 

Sfesss: 


ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHER 

LIBYA (TRIPOLI) 

Applicants should be mate, of bachelor status and should hold a 

fEEJ! >r C8 J- B - flnd 110 ,H Certificate.^ EFL 
teaching experience, preferably In the Arab world, is essential. 

The contract is for 12 months starting June/July 1962 Tha 

Per wl,h dements 

Pm * W,n9 ' D8|,a^,man, ,Qr,h0 

Mr Roy Evans 
Personnel Director 
Personnel Department 
M I ■ international Language 

MB I ■ Centres Ltd. 

H ( “ ®S Marylebone High Street 

London W1M 3DE 
Tel: ( 0 !) 486 1770/60 


LAMCO 


As managing agent for LAMCO, ■ 

Granges International Mining of Sweden 
offers the following important fob opportunity 
in Liberia, WEST AFRICA 



INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL 

• A primary teacher is required for the Lamco International School 
at the port of Buchanan, Liberia, to teach general subjects to 
International classes of children aged 6-8 yearn. An ability to 
teach music fo addition to normal classes is desirable 
Employment te commence mid-August. 1982. - ' . , ' , ■ 

Qualifications: Tea chat Training College graduate with et feast 1 
5 years experience. Preferred age range 28-40 yeara. 

Benefits Include: Attractive salary Fares paid. Freo schooling for 
children up to 9th grade (or IB.yearaof age). Free housing 

(furniture provided 81 icw ran »- Free medical oiteniion. Annuel 

salary review Non-conlribulory pension scheme. FIvb weeks 
leaveper annum. Generous seitllng-rri end transportation 
allowances. Contract renewal bonus effective after 12 months 

Befvlite. counted from date ol empioymeht. Modem 

communities wllh excellent recreational facilities, • <: i. 

The inlerngtlorigl LAMCO Jofol Venture operates Iren ore mines 
at NImbo, 170 mites Inland. Yakopa. Tpkadeh end Buclien&ri are 
the Industrial and rcsitjontipt complexes run by the Consortium 
Tha iron ore te transported by rallroed to tho West African " - 
seaboard port' of Buchanan. English te tits official language/ • ' 
Salaries paid monthly In U.8 A Potters (subject to local laxj. ■ 

Please send yodlr application (If you oral a round age 2 8*40 1 and ell 
relevant details about youreatf. your training and experience to- • 

GRANGES. :; - 
INTERNATIONAL MINING 

(Dept; f ESI ) New 2te&!a rid HbUse, 8th ftttdfe ‘ 
Haymafk^t, LONDON SW7Y 4T& ■ 











TIIK TIMES KLHH ATIONALSWmMEW l M p 


OVERSEAS 

continued 


KENYA 


SCHOOL 

S' ( pfS? e r-b\r^oj 

for tli* Junior Socilon. also 
HISTORY and MATIIH. Abil- 
ity to roaeli damns. porttrti- 
inrlp Runby. and u»ant. 

Reply with c-v.. named of 
rafnrvcn and, iiliaioiiranh 10 


GREECE 

O uni If l*rt exporiejii'eil 
tone lint* rnqlllrnfl front 
Sontemhor lOSU for artimil 
In AtliPim. 

Apply wlili full (lUtAtlH 
and plioto nr upli tn: Mn, 

Carrol . Kyrnkupuluun, 

Flcmlnn ID. Non J-losla, 
Athana. Ornert.- faaOflg^ oo 

JAMAICA 

Wanted for 111 Sepeninlier, 
IBS 3 Cl r aduntfi Timelier for 

Hi* follntvlm, sublett- 

PliyaU-B 

Apply I ni me din inly to: Til" 
l’rlil(.lnal. Cl urr ndoll C nllnin. 
Clin plot on **.*».. Jamnlca. 
W.l. forsvnriHim flu*. lininon tif 
«v*o (il Rrfer**-. 


rBlirrvi'i mi“ ITIlUinui* i.mrt iiMMii a 

Tho lleadinuiter. KB|iMfl«l Clin plot um I’.O.. J< 
Prouarntory St-nool. P.t*. W.l. forward Inn thy ni 
Kapinnat. Kunyu. IW 4 ^ 00(10 C») Referee'. 

Teaching ^ 

English 
Overseas 

BRAZIL 

2 Teachers of English, 

Socledade Bra si llera 
de Cultura Ingleaa, 

Sao Paulo. 

Reference: 82 D 6-7 

Duties: To teach English as a Foreign Language for 24 
hours per week to advanced (eve! students, and In 



addition some administrative work. Two year contract. 
Qualifications: A degree (preferably In English, Modem 
Languages or Llngulslloe) postgraduate TEFL qualification 
and three years experience. 

Salary: CrS 2,393,274 - C«$ 2,819.378. Current ■ 
exchange rata Cr$ 284 equals £1. 

Benefits: Return fares; baggage allowance; settling-in 
allowance; employer's shore of superannuation; 30 days 
annual leave*, resettlement grant: local contract 
guaranteed by the British Council. 

Starting date: 1 August 1982. 


KOREA 

Teacher of English. 

The British Council, Seoul. 

Reference: 82 D 45 

Dutlaa: To teach general English at all levela from 
beginner to advanced. Most of ihe work will be from tower 
Intermediate to advanced intermediate with some English 
, notably English tor teachers of 

should be between Ihe age of 
end 


WSm 






Benefits: Overseas^HI ■ 
b postgraduate allowance ; farps; 
^Hrennuattoft hWYearcorSgj 
■ring daiev Seftahiber 19S2. 


'<rV 


KUWAIT 

Dnvrlopinil F.nullsli 1 s 'S, l ,’ l,l . 1 '7' 

ciulrnn SirpteinuDr IUHJ 
Kram:ll. Maths. 1 ‘liyalrs. * >«J* 
mtmry. . liwiiornnhir. NI' 1 ** 1 
SI off (Hmlur lmpl.l 
nfiimnil iubln-H I i lmnn 
tlnpt- t:.V. refs., photo, lot- 
ter **r application. reply ur- 
acui to Tlic Prliu-lpitl. «■/•• 1 
Fairfield llrlvn. !, t p ! 1 l i , ' l 4 
VTirk H.K. 1438-111 JftOllob 

KUWAIT 

AI.-NOURI ENC11.IHII 
SCHOOL 

|».E. TF.ACI1EU IMiiiiIp' 
remold . ,, . 

Unexpected vatnucy fnr the 
ac nrion di »fnr comnirni- Inn 
Bnplmntinr, 1 Sfl'J. A|i|»Hi-nilt« 
limit hnve nt Innst three vr.iri 
IliailiLnti nsiieelnm-e .ttH" 
I'rlinary Nrliynl rlillUreii 
oUynart - lit »rnr*i. with 
it llliihinin fi'tnn n Hrltlali t.nl- 
In nr <>r F.ilnrnt Ion . tlyimiaa- 
111 o/nao' jnu nil n'l. van • «yr • 
run ms or con I ua« r 

One year rnliowuhle rcinlrnil 
«:«nnnimn-lnq Nn|it*nihrr. lot, 
10H3- Tax- iron salary it-nln nr 
E.1..100 IP K 7,300 nl riirrent 

nxi-linnim rate.: nccordtna in 

experlaiiLo niul qualifications- 
Free fnrillall*il alr-ruii; 
tilt lulled accumniurtminn 

Blinrnd with nnt other nlrl. 
Free nun. ulntrtclty, and wi; 
tar. Huh xorlptlun la juili luiBl 
Sports/ Soria I Club. Hell linn 
In allowance of CB3S annual- 
ly. Annual ai-pnumy clans r»- 
turn ale-faro to homo In U.K. 
plua one additional axcuralon 
Cara to U.K. Oratulty on turn- 
platlon of aarvlca. , 

Apply wilh curr Iruliini 
vltin. plmtuflrnph and two 

KI,V,Sfl n, rAMlWRTA r r‘'!5j 

Tho Headmiatrnaa. Al-Noiirl 
Fnullih School . P.O. Ilnx 
9100. Ahmndl, Kuwoll. Ar*. 


KUWAIT 

Kuwait i:nch.i«ii m mini. 

Tr in-ill no star* IPipllred 
septeniher. AM- 

7 rein ll. Mallta. I*lu nil •* . J lie 
inlnlrv. tieniironliv. Mu."*' 
him* iKiuilnr llepi » »l«" 

Hfiirrol anh let Is l'llnmrt 
Item. t:.V. rrft.. iiliuln. lei- 
lor of applli allon. reply in • 

B -pni to Tim l , rlnrl*in». I* i* 
■>x B064. Nnlinlali. KhwmII 

H4.-y.1Ql Afldllil.l 

SAUDI ARA1UA 
Jeihlnh. Dalirnn, Itlvnilli 
intk\«?ati!inai. suioiuji 

Fill lv qualified lent her 

wailtetl l male ami Imnalel. 
ivlili nl lenxt three )rnr* 
t ear lilnil nxiierlelli-n In Sei un ■ 
ilnry hrtUMiln. I » mill A level 

lllolnnv. I’hvnli a. Cheinlatry . 
Mnlhi. CetinrnphV. I nullah 

l.nnniinun mid f.llornlure. 
I'l-ininry Level Cliiaa Teni-hei a 
lane i-niiue ft to 1.11 nlao re- 
qulred Tor tlniiernl hr Inure, 
Mntlin mill Knutlah l.nnuuniie. 
Priority nlven to innrrlml 
tenriier i-oiiplea. minimum 
Ihrne ynnra* lenrlilnu ellierl- 
Mire l IK/I ISA rnqtilreil. Lxrel- 
Irnt roniiiiinrnilon In niruril. 
mn-n with experlnnrn anil 
iiiniliriL-ntliilin. Relief II a In* 
rlillln Iren art iitltimtilat loll, 
two months’ antiiml (are pnlil 
leave, air llrket* from Iman to 
ion trait Imap. Intnrvlnwa In 
he held aliortly III l.uinlon fur 
nrlinul year atartlna 19th An- 
nual, 1DB2. 

K lansn aand dcinlleil iiirri- 
nn villa plus pliutoi-nplea 
of ■ilinllUi at Iona nnri inrllfl- 
enten, two puna port iiliiilo- 
nraplia. solT niltlrraaeil 
ataninert aiivnlana and tiiniati 
telnutinna mini tier Hi. • Mr. 
A limed al-Shawl. UH. Hwlurave 


KUW ‘ , i*Ao6 H4l“5§\ LO,,d ° n; MVV,, 4hO0^.. 


The Aga Khan Hospital and 
Medical College, Karachi 


Medical Librarian and Assistant 
Librarians 

Application! are Invited from first division graduates in 
science for the posts of librarian and assistant librarians for 
the library of the Aga Khan Hospital and Medical College. 
Work experience in a library or e master! degree in library 
science Is desirable. Those interested In a career in Pakistan 
will be favoured. 

Depending upon experience and qualifications, those selected 
may be required to take further training for one year or less 
at the Casa Western Reserve School of Library Science, 
Cleveland, Ohio. The costa of subsistence, education and 
training will be undeiwrltten. Those who accept such training 
will be expected to obligate themselves for at least 3 years 
of service to the Aga Khan Hospital end Medical College 
Library. 

Resume' (2 copies) and two letters Of reference should bo sent 
not later then June IB, 1982 to: 

The Personnel Manager, 

The Aga Khan Hoapltal and Medical Collage, 

P.O. Box 3BOO, Stadium Road, 

Karaotii-B PAKISTAN 


MATHS TEACHER 

For exclusive girls’ school In Dubai, U.A.E. 
New buildings; British staff and curriculum. 
Excellent salaries, gratuity and conditions. 
Female, well-qualified only, with at least 7 
years’ experience with 11-16 age range. 
Computer skills essential. Must be creative, 
self-motivating, Independent. 

The post Is offered to someone prepared to 
accept responsibility as senior teacher. 
Send C.V., photograph, names of two 
referees, and contact details to: 

The Director, 

RASHID SCHOOL, 
do 54 St James St., 
London SW1 

• Interviews end of May In London. 


Ml’AIN 

r.«|>p|-lfii, nl (iii.l i|iinlirifT,| Lit- 
ultatl a rmiulrr* 

w*rK Hi Vnlpin la klu.i *|irnk 
ilii.nl M, is il I ill I ill millions r, 

li nrri »s nrk lnu an, I an n I leu I 
ni>i>nnr it m r n.-ullal liniHl 

iftlnrt 

.HpiiiI < V ss llli r in ml 

S iIimIm to Mr I.. I lln 4 . As do. . 
•nnliii rmi-oiiiu, J I Alnra . 
Vnlr.il la. ir soli ,1 m nail rn- 
■ rlsn a rrnlv lai vour n|,,(|l, n- 
llolla svlllltn .1 ssrrka IllraiP 
nailiniP Itiat II hns mil Iipph 
iiicphIiiI. 144.1.141 4 611000 


TUHKKY 

Trm-iivrt nn 
(or unoil l.r 
Mini lap II t‘. 
tpnrli Inullali 
•«p ml I V 
I n r ■ (rill a 1 III 11 I 
ko InalBiitml 


NETHRRLAND8 

prei'! r " rt Aububi, lsni , 

I* in* Main " sap/SpV/i Ed 
l.Sttu; aoniM .1 'srVAPPI. 


Rnklr kaii /| n«t niilnil 
I4MU) 


• irilPlitlv I ra, i||i Pit 

l.niiaiumin S. 

I T..H. IJiinlirinl In 
|ali 

V mill tiimio lor 

■l III ll|l Pa (all . 11(1- 

Inil I nal Nn 47 


Tnrlsns 

4611001) 


HI* AIN 

larnaliialp I I I. Ipni Imra rr- 
■ lull Pal . At mlPiiila SPill 1'IH‘J. 
.1. I ill Pl-s |r ss a lull -Add F V. 
nilal |(|l ■ it a ■ tl>. I’ll! kllllllllill 1 / 
t.iatianlpr A ala jiat. 1.1 kllHIt'IA 
I S, inlu 1 14 16191 46111111(1 


■i..n 

-nrisi.n'S'VM! ‘isss 

WS:i"n’ft 1 ." , ^F TalalwSK 

litilila. (.IB BBS) ,no 


BOTSWANA 

POLYTECHNIC 

Applicaliona are invilod lor Ihe following posts: 

HEAD OF DEPARTMENT 
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING 

Degree in Mechanical Engineering wtlh substantial 
Industrial, leaching and administrative experience, 
MIMechE preferred. To be responsible to the Principal tor 
(ho administration of Ihe Department, to teach on OTDsnd 
HTD courses and supervise the commissioning and 
development ol new laboratories and workshops. 

SENIOR LECTURER 
TELECOMMUNICATIONS 
AND ELECTRONICS 

Minimum FTC in Telecommunications, HNOHND In taW 
current Electrical Engineering preferred with at least 6 
years teaching and 5 years industrial experience. To be 


munlealiona and Electronics on CQU Courses, eg GQU 
270 and 280; asBlst in departmental administration. 

SENIOR LECTURER 
PLANT ENGINEERING 

HNC/HND in Mochanlco! Engineering wilh cwsldersbls 
plant enginoerlnn experience plus a minimum ol 8 years 
leaching and 5 years industrial experience. Tobe 
responsible to tha Departmental Head lor Pam 
Engineering subjocta up to HTD level, organise srt 
supervise Ihe Applied Thermodyn^lca/P^t 
Hydraullcs/Ftulds Labs and leech on CQLI courses m | 
25S and R00 series. 

LECTURER iun 
AUTOMOBILE ENGINEERING 

HNC/HND in Moclienlcttl Englneorlng or FTC iin W* 
Englneoilny with minimum 4 yeera teaching and B ywa. 
Industrial oxpcirloneo. To topch praclice and heory .^ 
CQLI 020 In Cofialruollon Plant up to Pan ^ leva). «*“ 
wilh CQU 826 ond sup|J0rt WWlfiJSBS 


special oinphnsls on hoovy volilclas and plant. 

HeB^o/Dopnrfmsnt (Principal Loci) £ 16,317 (Married) or 

£13,467 (Sfnflle). 

Senior Lecturer in rungo £1 1.446 - £13 .hzs. 

Locturer in range £9.777 - £12,001 
(Inclusive of a lax-froe supplomonl paid by me 
Government under Its aid programme) 

CendtdBtaa should be cltlzonn of the Untied Klngom^ 
26% terminal gratuity on basic aalaw free^f 
houalng; oducallon aJtowanoM and I hrtway wa ^ 


OH naiOBioa enuviu uv — — -aanvKS' 

26% larminal gratuity on basic aalaryj fwj 
housing; oducallon allowancsa ar« nmway ^ 

for children; an appointment grant aridsninter 
loan ere payable In certain clroumslancej. . 
Application form and further 
Council Overseas Education^ 

(D/TETOO), 90/91 Tottenham Court Road. Lo<100fl ,, 
ODT. 01-680 8572 Ext. 23. 


Assistant Drectorof Education 

(Institute of Language in Education) 

Hongkong £21)210 pUi.425%8ratuity 


0 Low tax- maximum 15% 

• Medlcgl/dentil benefits 
FreepaMsge 

- The Education Department of the Hong Kong 
Government Invites applications for appoint* 


Government invites applications for appoint* 

rrwtnt as Assistant Director of Education to Appointment will be for a peripu or 7 ye«»- * • r 
develop and direct the Institute of Language in saiarv Is HK$25,800 per month (apP roxlmB e Y 
Educadon- AppUCanti must haws^ a degree in £29,210p.a.*). . , „ 

eUher.Engllshof Cheese plus a Master deareo -. For further Information and applies rlontojm, 
rfleU & o Mong Kong or Brillih write 10 “ha Hong, Kong OovfrnMnt OflW. 
or equivalent: A diploma to edu- fi Qrafton Suect. London WlX 3LB. ff J 
equivalent! 15 years post*dogree . w f ; ED - ]/82(ADE) at the top of your loiter. 


• Generous annual leave 

• Subsidised accommodation. ■ 

• Children!* education allowance 
Appointment will be for a period of 3 


SKSmm»Sw 

In a related field froti 
Uftlvertity or equlye 


further information arid 


cation or equivalent! 15 years’ post-dogree . ref; ED - 1/82 (AdE) at the top of your letter 
exper Bhce In the teaching of .Chinese, and/or Closing date for return of application mrm». 
^lish^ngyaaeand regaarch/tCBchlng bajnlng, llih June 1982. 

5 years of wliich should be in a key adMnlsirtt- .&,,«< «.« MKsro 60 » CM» 

• lye post iq an educational Institution! flnd abilitv fSiAfrc.wflMiMitaii. ,i ■ 

, to lvrlre and spsnk fluontiy both Chinese and . — 

msmmmssSmmrnsmmsmm Hong Kong Government! 


* 6 1» . 


v4 5 


IIIttHIlUM.W 





li lli^^ 



-r^-nas ft* t-> .<< ri ii ( r mi in -, , rfl ,, 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


OVERSEAS 

Mntinuod 


spaiN Main TE AC. - UK US nf 
cNOlaiail rcqiilrod fnr lun- 

niaae school. Til >*i>iiiii,i«u,.„ 
mld-Soptainbui-. 

m Por Furtlisr timullH. i nutn.-i 
Miss J. Huiilitm. 36 i:insHt((r- 
(laid Rd. . Lonrioji W. 4. Tal. 
01-903 2966- I387U6) Jflonno 

INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL („ 
Africa sanks ih.ilIiIiii, i-mii,lia. 
comhinatloii ■O' l.«*v«,| i>hy. 

Sc» wlthSoroiiiliirv Art or 

Primary Clnm. tal, I'jirli ( 1 1 


Primary cinii. in, n > , , 
141-73-9 1 O'* r;v nnri 

nhotoarpnll. Wrlli- llux Nn! 
YES. 4382 Tim llnii-h VVC1X 
iEZ. {33*7li -iftonno 


SPAIN 

gUALlFIEO E.1..T. 

nfaulrad for i-rntrns In Valin- 
dalid anil Zuruno/n, Sun in. 

Wrlia. enrliisiim r.v. In Tlin 
raallih Coiiirn, Vclnrniii‘4 IK, 

SS® '• sp “ 1 "- ,4 "%nooo 


SPAIN 

OAK HOUSE SCHOOI 
Rarrnlnnu. Spn|n L 

taath f ruin ife. c . *o«ho r to 
CV 

ffi .-'Si'; '■„"£» ssjSW 

I'lKJrp Cluvar 12 - ir °n s , an 
138 7 4 U*| W%o | 1 b, 8§|£J|; 


turkey 

ratswaw 




Fuff 7, EACH ERS 

^qaaf^rVca” 

0NBK 




SINGAPORE \ 

Centre of 

Computer Studies, 

Ngee Ann Polytechnic 

. The Centre is being developed lo help 
mesl Ihe rapidly increasing demand for 
skilled computer personnel in Singapore It 
will bscharged wilh the responsibility to train 

Aral year the following posts will be required for 1 
Seplambsr 1 982 or as soon as possible thereafter. 

Director 

Dufies: Responsible tor managing ihB Centre: in 
computer personnel. 

ESSSteiSSSSS 18 9hould have haWa senior 
posl (probably Head of Department) in a British 

educational Institution. They should have particular 




nr »S 88 toCpmputar Sludios. Employment within, ' 

kdellni'lo ,h - mBf ° r com P uter 

(3 0 poats) 88OC,aj0S ^ Heada 0f Sect,on ) 

lhfl ‘ soclions be developed within Ihe 
wwwe, Programming ^ Computer Archltoclure and 
S2f° n 8yBl0m8 ' hree Hoads ol Section are 

! sponsible lor; the management ol all staff 
aw resources within thoir section; curriculum 
^to^nenl arid maierlslB production wlliiiritholr 1 
Him edviso and supervise rocruilmenl end 
Wining of staff and undertake some leachlnn. 


£vw! m i on,! Candidates must heivo u rolovnnl 
SuSSn® 1 huvo h<,ltJ a Bonlorpost in a British ' 
devSES i B i nnd l,avo t> f oven obllily in llw 

SHEWS? 1 ^ ND ootirson In CornpulorSfudles. 
Hft'j}* In areas olhor than their particular 
ffin 2fi. nr ? h !fj h| y 1 i toslrablo, ogdqla base design. 
■SKS 01, 0, °- cnmmorclul, industrial or 
gwammcnl oxpurlnncodoairnblQ. 

Relates (Various Disciplines) 

5SL?j.^P9Wjbtetor ourricukim devalopmenl and 
arcSS W i i cUon ! I or lh0 ProQ'nmming. computer 
fin aHoS' ,n,0 ™ Bti0n a 7®l8to of dala baso courses 
l , he Head of SecUon); lo undortako 
,u,0r,alB - "olaon wilh local emptoyarG. 
Ieat*ii» 0flndldale8 m| J8t have soveralyeara 
fSi!SiW X Ea rt9 b£i n 8 Brllfsh aflu0Ql,onfll institution 

wjjNP Computer Studies 0 CereSSates wKo hSve\he 
expertise and experience In more than one area 
^PWaUsailon will have an advantage. 

SSSlJSliSff?***** 3 The salary which will be taxable in 
be commensurate with quattflestions and 


Idjsed medtea! benefits tor tha amptoyge 



./ 




'to the Cenrfal Provident Fund at the present 
J Cross salary. Two or three year 


“w further details end an application 
■ witi, pietN write, quoting the 
L Post refotenoe, to: Section A 
V Educational 

' Appointment Department. 
The Brltlih Council, 

90-91 Tottenham 
Court Road, London 
iUBwV W1P DDT. 




Administration 
Local Education 
Authority 

HAMPSHIRE. 

cSKi^^ 0 s N ER?i h ^ ITTE • 
Advi - ar « 

Hampshlpo' 3 ° uth Eob ‘ 

Are you In tares ted in Joining 

Asf&f vSS? 1 c fflsa 

Trn C R? P A jS^p^moMh 


MANCHESTER 

WWa 

C8 I ^9 , l A . L S; B a T 33l^ ' CSO 

-EiSiS ? 1 “C ; 
SE, ib 
afikA -Kaares 


' fo r° 'the** work b £r ^ 0 “» onB »>la 

a:^ a OI frcS„ - 



EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 


.. — i <■»)«. uiioaii u, a umi nuuiumy, (or ulH 

undermentioned poBts of m^orresporisIbWty; t 

(I) ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT 
. SCHOOLS DIVISION , ; 

POIfa) - £9 ,474-£1 0,476 Inclusive 

ThB officer wlU work to tha Assistant Education Officer 
responsible for Schorts and Spacfal Services. Duties will 




IlliyillWIIIIIl IVUIIOHIIV ire’l "V.T.^r 

from the Chief Education Officer, Town Hall, Baridng 
|Q1 1 7LU. Pfeaw enclose foolscap a, s.e, and Indicate 
clearly the post ivhtohlntereets you. ; -= 

Closing date»4thJiin8, 1982. : 

BARKING COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY 
DEPARTMENf Of HUMANITIES 

LECTURER II 

G.C.E. WORK (GENERAL EDUCATION) ' 
-Salary Seale: ^KI^II.IM par annum 



Borough Engineer’s 
Department 

Road Safety 
Training Officer 

AP2 £5,547-£6,009 Inch 

Cto you have previous experience in road safety? We are 
seektr® to recruit a Road. Safety Training Officer who will be 

? road 8a,ei y «tocS(Ta^S!!!r^ 

You will be calld upon to address groups of all apes and a 
good knowledge ol Ihe use of visual aids is desirable 

wSmUS®"!? 9 “5 WMkend wo* Ib necessary. 

You must hold a dean driving licence and be In possession of 

paydJ™ n V6hlCle tor Wlll<!h ° “’ U81 USSr ca,P ^™ a "« °a 

(DTSt C OulHhln M “L-, <1V '! l " bl “ Stalling Ollier 

oiS# SiSfS. upon Th,m "’ *“"•»- T «'= 

Closing date: 4lh June, 1982. 

ROYAL BOROUGH OF 
KINGSTON UPON THAMES 


WAKEFIELD 
_ CITY OF WAKEFIELD 
METROPOLITAN DISTRICT COUNCIL 
YORKSHIRE AND HUMBERSIDE REGIONAL 
HEADSHIP UNIT 

(Inundation with Bratton Hall Collegoof Higher EduoaUon) 

UNIT DIRECTOR 

based at Woolley Hall College, will provide an annual 

sttxssr" ■» 

■H wi, ‘ ^ enhanced during appotntment by 
means of an honorarium which la negoilanieT the total 

tKteecSr 001 *° exceed 1he ma ^numi of Group 

fu ( !hBr pertlculare ere available 
from... The .Chief Education Officer, 8 Bond Stmt, 


Wakeflejd, (Ref: 8504/TJEJ. Completed forms should be 



BOUNTY COUNCIL 


EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 

DEPUTY 

DIRECTOR OF EDUCATION 

Salary: E15,69b-£f 6,689 p«r annum 

TJe ■bovs post wifi become vacant on tha 1st September. 
1982. Candidates must be honours graduates and have 
appropriate teaching and adrnWalrarive experience at a senior 
level In the education service. A knowledge of Welsh Is 
desirable. 

Application forme and lurther particulars are svaUable on 
receipt of a stamped addressed envelope from the' Director 
of Personnel and Managemam/Senriessy^ County Hall. 
Cqrmarthen. Closing data for the return of completed 
application forme to the above Ts 7th June, 1982. 

. CANVASSING DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY 
. . .. WILL DISQUALIFY 


Buckinghamshire County Council 

Senior 

Assistant Education Officer 

(Development) 

PrlndpA) Officer Rang* . 

£14, 75l-£16,665per annum 

Thlsls otWrd-lierpo^tconcdrncd with nil aspects of • 

planmngior future education provision , and the 
.. supcr^onofbbildfn^^^ 

CaruforaJlowahco. 100% removal cxpdnsci, 
lodging aUowenceandaji stance with legal expcqsei . 


i payabtein approved rases. . • 

Furt her details arid b ppllcnlf on forms from CWef 
Kducagort OtElcer (Gl), CtHjnty Hap; Aylesbury lipip . 
. lUZ,*on receipt of a stamped addressed envelope. , 
Completed appllwHonsto be returned within 14 dew of • 
■ tfrf appearance of lh If advertisement. 











M 


! ' , 

i ! -I 


:'i !i; ■ 

i i i- 


’ • ’ I 


i ) • . 

'! : H : 







ADMINISTRATION L.E.A. 

COIlUllllUlt 

SOUTH GLAMORGAN 

g8y^|S^^UTMr.Nr 

^§/ E 4 K &?6%“: E £ , ).,7 3 p. u . 
(Qualified) 

£9.064 ■ £6. AAA n o 
<Ejcw«rlcnceUl 

llof . CSI3. To DC board uilh« 
Carrera Office, Cnr , ll*l ■ The 
i,n»« H nil iitliHtl«m !•* the 
CarBi'm hcrvli-e. funded by 
tin* WdIhIi Office. ipiMlfluiliy 
lu (insist yunmi iinomiHtiveil 
■tnoulr. narllvularlv In rein- 
lion to tin? Youth Oi» pmr i u m - 
tie* l» roil muinm. Tim "iiiti-ioi- 
rul mniLli-nnl will ho ri'*UMiii»»- 
■■■« in iliu Senior rarer™ 
nrrlcor rur dm Uiiumiilnvril, 
mnl will woi* with i nil ini »ni 
wlio Bhfiro innioimlhlllii t«n* 
monitor Inn irnlnnoa nil %i»- 
rluiin parts of Ihr V until 
oppurtunii irn l > rmirninini>. 
dihI fur linlnl HU them lU’otl- 
rro to apnronrlnir irnlnlnii 
uml employ man t , offering de- 
mur il cnivrra mivit-o where 
uimroprlate . A|i|»li«nnw 

ahotiiu ho iirutluBtfiH nr hold ■> 
similar qualification, ■•refill'- 
nhly hnvlnn a. err Inure or 
iruutnu as a Cnrrcrt milter, 
(j thorn with KHPorlunta nf 
learning ar train Inn »mmn 

K nople will hr riniRlueroil for 
tn lower ncala. 

Application form, rnturn* 
nbl*i by let Juno. I ‘J B 2 . avail* 
able from Ui« PmonnM 
(JI floor. Hill Moor. C'miniv 
1 1 trail quartern. Ncwuiirl 
Cardiff (Tel: Oaail-JnH (»33. 
Ext. A4 ll/a I. lASSa'H 4HIH1O0 


Child Care 


Education 

Psychologists 


SOMERSET 


THE M AUCHAN r- 
IIOLMUAY h«'IKMI|. 


A IIOllhF.I’A rilKH with 
enemy nntt piilhnaiflNiii 
tmnli.il tu ni-i.v lilr liileri'Hl. 
nmi in ilvllln* lor out ul 
Hc-luitil hour* nmi belli 

ciirr fm- 35 in iT.HtlVi’ mill 
ill* l urhril Inis a. »«i till* III'- 
Hltloul Ini Hilioiil Ini' i lill- 
il ren ol Primary/ MliUllr 
hi-huol uiir. I ruin hi-omni. 
lid-. ItlBV!. I’UivInu fli'lti. 
win nl mnl uiir ilcii iv l Hi 

Hivlnimllili in ml. 411 limir 
week. 10 wri-ks il ■■ ll ■■«■ I 
■mid hollilay. N.J.C. iiiiiill- 
t Li.ns anil Rillari nmirill mi 

to i|iin I lllrut Liiiih nmi rl- 

lini'lrnrp. Mmli-rii A lii-il* 
ruum hiniiii with tinru'ir 
nvnllaliln. 


Apply hy liillrr pll-line, 
iilvlnn 2 r<'l«i‘«i"t. to Eric 
Younn. U.A.. I J lii Eil.. 
Ha nil mas ter. The Mnr- 
chant-Holl t itay bchaal, 

North ( .‘her I tun . Temple. 

coiilbK. Siuiinrai-t. II AH 

hah. f.wjui.ni naiHi no 


Lancashire^ 

bounty Council 

PRINCIPAL EDUCATION WELFARE 
OFFICER 

Salary Scale: P02(3-7) El 1 ,B1 4 -El 2,999 pa 

Applicants (or this senior post should be appropriately 
qualified with either a Certificate of Qualification In Social 
work, a Degree, ora similar recognised qualification, 


should ItavB had previous administrative experience at a 
Senior level, preferably in the Held of Education Welfare 
andbecapableof exercising Initiative and enterprise in 
oo-ordlnailng end developing the Education Welfare 
Service throughout the County Area. 

Application forms and further details obtainable from 
the Chief Education Officer, PO Box 61 , County Hall, 
Preston PR1 8RJ. Tel: Preston 283700, to whom they 
should be returned quoting Reference Co.1 02/1/P J. 

Closing dale: 1 0lh June, 1 982. Shortlisted candidates 
will be notified within fourteen daye following the 
dosing date. 


SHEFFIELD EDUCATION DEPARTMENT 

ADVISER FOR ENGLISH 

SALARY SCALE: 

Burnham Qroup 9 £13,50S-£14 f 631 

Applications ore invited from suitably qualified and experienced 
graduates with, wide and successful teaching experience in 
sohoota. Experience In an advisory capacity would be' an 
- advantage. 

The person appointed will be a member of a strong advisory 
team spanning all major areas of the curriculum. Ha/ahe will bo 
required . to undertake general advisory duties . with 
rcBponalblllly for a group, of eohode Including primary schools, 
and wlH bo exported to promote good praclioe in; and provldo 
support for. English and Language Development at all leveiB 
from prersohool to post- 18 . . 

Application forms and further details from the Chief 
Education Officer (ref. 9T/P/JT)* Education Department, 
Leopold Street, Sheffield 81 1RJ to whom completed 
applications should be returned by 4 June. 

H is the pOUoy of the. Sheffield City Council to provide equal 
employment opportunitte* and consideration will be given to ell 
suitably experienced . and qualified Applicants regqrdleaB of 
handicap, aeX or race. . . • _ : ,- 


DKUHYSIUHK 

COUNTY COI'NCII. 


liii'catiunai. 
i»hyi;ii«ii.»<iistn i3 

iin«i'ii 


Ani>lli iiiiniiH iirr in v ii ..il 
fur niipnluliiii'iil n* l-ilm «• 

tllllllll I'HVl lull I Mill l III III* .1 

ill.' liltin' nf nil Al-I-Il Team 
iniHrii lu either ilir noriiv. 
KLnlrv nr Nnrlh l»i'r. 
tivililrr nr eiia. 

A|i| >11 1 uilln vlimilil l'i‘»- 
inis .ill MiUimirn ileiirer III 
imri In il i hi v . inn lilmi 

I'.'rlMini- null n |iunt-i|r.iu»i. 
nil* aitiitll I Ii iilliill III i'il in <l* 
1 1.111 III |lnvc*llillli,l\ . 

Snlnry wlitiln Hip ShiiI- 
Imry hitill* rur Filiiiiitliill.ll 
l , *vcln»lii»ilnin. 

£7.590 ll'illllt ftl- 
£12. Aid l I’nliil 221. 

Ill'imival niiiiiisr* mill 
lixl aliiu all 1 1 warn r In 
niiiiruvpd inm*. Travrlltnii 
allow mica in apprnvpil 
i ii*rh . Trn vi'li lii'i ullnwunri' 
ill ill ■ (>|-<lii iii-r* Willi I In- 
Hnillliy li.nmrll’i i-ni-rriil 
.■ 1. 1 hi. 

Clnsllln •lull-:- .10 Jinn' 
1'IH J. 

Api'lli nl lull fiirnl* mnl 
luii'lli ii Inr* fur Hip nlnivi- 

I lii-.t {hup foiilmaii iilciinisl 
rum Hip Dln-ilnr uf 
Kilucailcin. enmity orrii-nn. 
Mn(l«ii-k. Dnrhynlilrn. IJE4 


Di.rliynlilrii Cuuntv 

Council In a nnuul nnncir* 
Innltv nmpluyor. (389541 

SAOOUO 


I if- A I Til UDUI'ATION COUNflL 

Director General 

ABOVE £24,000 

I he Dirct'lur l iviirral i* ilu- in.iiu ic|mc*ciii.iihi'. iH*r.nti.ili>r. 'I’nkom.m. drnuchJsmon and 
cuiuinc fur ihc rmnu il 1» it* «‘*rk nl lic.illli c.liu .iii.ni ihc V niiikil ik-tcrmmcs policies 
ties uk's iiiul ink i'cs on pr inn ins .iml » .im|i.iipns. piihhshi % s.lin! iris .mil liuMkity rrmicrial' 
Unik-llllkl'MIllli sup|t.iTls Sills CVS .in.l If n-.lt l II. i nll.lli-s .lllltl SilllijlIi’s, ihuIkmI. CpillcinloIlH)- 
I'dl, siH inlni'K-jt. |is>ihnlii|ru.il .nut nlik 4tuui.il intntm.iliim niis,n^ fr,,,,] j| S work anil 
fnmi llt.ii ul utliiTs. pmiiinu-s ci liii .iiii hi .mil ii.iiiiin>;. .mil ni.iiiit.tms li.usnn with ihc cduca- 
iiuii sciski 1 , ilic ii.iiiun.il lu-.ilih srisi.n. .mil l»..il .mil ii.itiun.il p.incrnmcni, with related 
Imilics mnl uilli ihc mcJi.i 

I lie pri-'i-iil aiiiiii.il 1-utljis-l ul tin- 1 Kiim il. wliuh is iui.nui-il l<\ ihc Dcparlmcnl nf Health 
ami Suci.il Seiiiiiiv. is I.s 'm . .uni iIh-h- .hi- .ihmii hh mrmK-isnt sulf 

Ihc VJC4IK1 is due lu ihc irsipii.iiiun ■>! I'lulessnr K || i.ivlnr, DM , l-RCP., caused bv 
severe lluuil ilmniip.e In In* In him- mi i ‘.ililm m.i li is Impeil ih.u Ins sik-i essnr will cumc into 
post mi I ( kiuher l‘W’ 

l-urllier iiilmniiilinu ulmul ihn citieiurii il cli.ilkii^iii}; pusl may be nhlaincd 

(run) llic (.'hiiimiiiti u( llir l minul. I>i llii.m I Invil. «hu mil he iciy prulc'ful lu receive 
informnl ciupiirii’s triun. i>r Mip^'H.nis .iIuhiI. pulenli.il upplimiils. wlm should have a 
prufcssumiil intcrcsl in health cdiuaiunt. in he.ihii. tn cdueulum. m in rcleviim aspects of 
lilllllllllllU.llltMl 

Apiilkiitinns. wliiili mil l>c h.iiulii'il in slin I 

cun I nk-iiee liy llic f h.ii(iii.ni in peiMm. shmiM AyvA 

ci>ni;iin ;i triii tictilinii vii.u-.u list ul piihlic. .iii.ni*, il C/A Au 

any. and die u.mics ul I line referees, and slmuld. 1 VA AVJ 

il pussihle. rejeh him m Oxford hy 7 June 
Brian B. i.luyd. M.A-. D Sc.. 

oiSmd oxionST Lme ‘ The hlealth Education Council 

Td: Oxford' filHM) M353 * li'lpmM y )U tn better health 

I hit |>i»i ,i i'fitn r.i men < w«/ »i-*ii,,i. 



CYNGOR SIR 

GWYNEDD— 

COUNTY COUNCIL 

CJrfanraldwr 
Addysg 

£19,113 -£20,445 

Gwahoddir ceisiadau am y swydd o 
Gyfarwyddwr Addysg iWynodd. Daw'r swydd yn wag 
yn dilyn ymddeoliad y Cyfarwyddwr prasennol yn 
Ebrlli, 1983. 

Prif Ryfrlfoldebau'r Cyfarwyddwr yw cynghori'r 
Awdurdod Addysg ar faterion o bofisi; gwarenod 
safonau addysgoi ysgoibn a cholegau Gwynedd; 
gwolnydduV gwasanaeth addysg yn y Sir; a chyflwyno 
polisiau a phenderfyniadau'r Awdurdod Addysg i 
rieni’r Sir at cyhoedd yn gyffredinol. Disgwylir i r 
Cyfarwyddwr gyfrannu hefyd at reolaeth corfforaethol 
y Cyngor Sir IrwyT TTm Rheoli. 

Dyiai fod gan vmgeiswyr gymwysterau 
academaidd, a phrofiaa sylwedaol o welnyddiad. 
rheolaeth a chy hoeddusrwydd yn y mass addysg. 

Bydd proflad o ddysgu plant, myfyrwyr neu oedoibn 
yn fanlelslol. 


Examiners 


rirm '/n’lii * « III*/; il'l« 


mudo a nowid cartref, cost llety a pnris prynu car. 

Ff urflerml cate a manylion pellach oddl with 

» [ Personal y Sir, SwyddfaV Sir, Caernarfon, 
cau: U Mehefin, 1982. 



AHSOCIATKD 
EXAMINING HOARD 


riir ll 1 111 r.i IiivIIp'h i»U- 

W 'l.Ullilll* Inr llir l a IOl Ml 
(Hil.lt A lull liu AIK 

NAVII.AMHN IU/I/.I nl 

imiilNAiiv i.i.vr.i.. rur 

IIip I , |H4 It mniiln.il Kilt 

Api'lli nlilii ■liuiilil Iihvi- <i 
,lr Urn i- nr llulil nil i'i|«ils.i. 
If III iinrtllf Iratluri III Hir 
ridil »r All- Nos IiiiH li.ol mill 
linen linil ul Irani 4 
rurmil i-rlnvaiii ipuiiilim 
i , (lirrlriici > l , r« , simii re- 
niillii ntSi in PXI»i'T|PtH P I' 
11 api'lli In I . 

I 'nrlliri lur«i iimlliui null 
>ui nii|>lli iilliiii (iirni inns lu- 


ll rv iii'iiprnl i.ihl. Ilu- 

Asm ■■In If- >1 IlMifiilnliiii 

III, Ill'll WnlllmiHUI I ( . 

Alilrnlinl. I* 

• till I 1 111 J . In sslnull ■•■Hi- 
iilrtnl (nr urn nlmnlcj In- rr- 
liiru> , i) uni l.ifi-r iliun I si 
Jllly. 1'lH-a l.lll'l'/r. I/HUHUH1 


JOINT 

MATRICULATION 
BOARD 
F.X A Ml NATIONS 
COUNCIL 

A i> , 1 1 1. iUIuiim fur the poll 
nl IliisliH'r lor Moiloraiorl, 
liu- llir iiunstlmi paper* Is 
llir Inlluwlna subjFcli in 
i I k- <iCb naainlnntion ar» 
Ins lii-il H-om wcperlancTd 
si In, nl Inorhrrs In achooli 
nr i-nlli'iirB i list do noi 
lu i-iitiri' rundldatai for Ihi 
J Mil iixuiulnalloni cob. 


Aiiiiolni mfiil of Havliiri 
fur 1 9H3. GCE onanlni- 

llnils. 

Hiiuh -knnplnn , «i4 

Annum Inn Hlrillnury). >M 
I'rlni Inin nf Accounli 
l AHvuni i'll l . 

■ ir- si mi Hirillnury and 
AUviiik >-i| i. 

I ii i-tln-r Infill iwnUnii and 
Hiiiilirntiuii farms iri 
■ ,i ■ i .ii 1 1 . i k 1 1 I ruin IM 
sm roiin v. JoliU Motrlrul*- 
nmi limiril. M nil .’Ii o*ty r. 
MIA ftl'.li. Miwiinji tlain lor 
uiii'lii Minns: OK* Jii'r: 

I'lHt! . I.Vl'i.l-H 6000M, 


Unlvoralty of London _ .. 

llnlveralty Entranco and School Exantinallons Council 
General Certificate of Eduoatlon Examination 
The Cuuncil Invltun npphcaliong lor the foliowlng 
oppolnlmonls: 

Chief Examiner from June 1984 ; 
Alternative Ordinary Level 

RuitfliOUS Sluriluo 

Moderator from 1 August, 1983 

MuRiu 

Dortgit ami Todutulugy 

Ar.pHuunta Hhunlri Ihi unujmiio!. or Hold ffPJfJJ 
qiioltficniinnn nr«l uliouid hn imdor mo ngo ol 85 w 
yntirB rocniil touchinfi nxfmrioiino. fcxamlnino ex P en 
OHQOnllBl. 

Tor application lormn and furthor dotalis *°., on 5 
Secretary, University Entrance andSohMlS^minaljo^ 
Council, University of London, 88-72 
: London WC1E BEE. Appilcanin 

addressed loolscap onvelopo. Completed JPP 1 ^ 01 ^^ 
should be returned by 18 June. 1902. pr6 J 0 ^ C ^K«| 
need not ra-epply slnco their appHcahorte will be COf1 
with any new ones received. 


CAMBRIDGESHIRE 

EDUCATION 

....Inn 

min 


Applications are invited for lhl9 poslln the 1 
Area of the County baaed in Patertwrouph. 
Applicants should have an Hondum 0^9 ® er 
Paveholonv for eautvalent) appropriate 




'.'“PVflf'l V V .* 4T«t N'l. 
-•*.-« » ; A-' f. f- 

4 T 'i -*!• S» 


•V ?!./{ 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21,5,82 


University of London 

University Entrance and 

School Examinations Council 

General Certificate of Education Examination 

' m " eS aPPllCa "° nS ,W 018 '°"°wlng 

Chief Examiner from June 1984 
Advanced Level 

Mode 2 Talmudic Lileraturo/Judaism 

Applteants should bo graduates or hold appraoriaie 
quallllcallons and should be under the abed as 
with live yeara recent teaching experience 
Examining experience essential. M C0 ‘ 

For application forms and further details write m 
The Secretary, University Entrance and SchoS 
Examinations Council, University of LondSS 
68-72 Gower Street, London WC1E 8EE* 
Applicants should enclose a self addressed 
foolscap envelope. Completed application fonns 
. should be returned by 18 June, 1982. 


WELSH JOINT EDUCATION COMMITTEE 
CYD-BWYLLGOR ADDYSG CYMRU 

Appointment of 
EXAMINERS 

wsffsag s srarsar sfsss 

experience of teaching, for tho following appolnlments 
GENERAL CERTIFICATE OF EDUCATION 1983 

. CHIEF EXAMINER 

In Engineering Drawing and Building Drawing 

ASSISTANT EXAMINERS 

In Chemistry and Scripture 

. in . nN 9ubl8cts BI Certificate ol 
j*?®?™ 1 ®JY Education level also, and tneae will bo Disced in a 
to* ami considered aa vaenneioa occur. P * CM ,n a 

aai^rawj 
K «fitiss h ;™nt™ 0,0 M,vln ° ln ma ' are 

aHffCSWaaas ssz 

SlStl!!!'. 1110 ■nveiope should bo endorsed 


Uteure Services Department 

Museum Assistant 

ri H, ?* or V 8nd Rasearch and Education) 

ffiSSfflclll PPu‘ canl wl11 bo roapunaibte to the 
^ Watorv ho °l>aratlon and development of the 
pre-b a Mrt r T. lv & flnU 8,1 aspects of the Education 
SwBlfflflfl m>h ^ a8 , 8tT l oroa House Museum. Major 
.©wsndunri^J Lt r,c ut, ° ©’‘Pending the local history 
fCfiUdran n 9 rcsoarch, toachlnn to a wide range 



a Georgian House in secluded 
utoe from tho Town Centra. 

full rnmovnl expenses paid, 
no ullbwanco, tagai and re- 
a Tn appropriate CQ3C9. Sports 

loBcriptlona are available from 
r, Harlow District Counoil, 17 
Ifariow, Bteox CM 20 1BD. 

ns must bo returned by 18 th 
>piy.. 


IARLOW 


Miscellaneous 

Quiz?*™ collboe 

OrnnniMr Tor IV J n, o. 8oc l«' 

no.7 nj ad ^ w B °^ a 



DURHAM 

serv I }ce IENTal music 
INSTRu'^NTApERIPATETrc 
TEACH E Rs/I N ST R UCTQHa 8 1 c 

wonttiff'ft, Ji'fiRM In 


WALTHAM FOREST 

JS®M°.«SK8V or 

tSri3K' A E L H OI ’ ,,I>, ' T UNITV 

London ahhi,i^ p , 1 b rarest. 
Payablo. dd t on lo 'alary 

HmG9- 

London 


wanaa. " Dap kiIIUbb nllo- 


warioo. miieege niia- 

v.UfSTSg? on- 

nS y ’aa'te 
fe lon °/^"Ki„ M ^« 

Durham. C o. 

niinr-. ft TiK co, p t ° r 


»•- 

p kjss saSaS^'SJ: 

|FraS£S&©wLJ5 

l»s«S 

s^apDiy 

wsLft. ® 

and to"p n rtl cl po to 0 IS 

concerie! 


BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 

HILLINGDON 

, • QN, ^5?e t .YSSg8S ,, OP 

lULLINanO^^VENTUKE 

..asK.aas'Sw'Bsad 


Ppvs.:® 

botvye?B , *Anri^ PP 2 ,nlmanu 

19»* wltt prl . l i.! n ? Aunuil! 

Srrr^ na '"S" 1 ii 

p“SSJt n 7a VaKStoYf youn « 

maon. Owy»io3{l. <443 I ?f n ‘ 

. 680000 

SfaSR- jh£?xS£ 




ROCHDALE 
Ms theatre COMPANY 

Comm^K^f^Educatlon/ 
campaS? memb B ra? rm ‘ n0nt 

aBSSaewsa 

.fiTAOB MANAGER with 
TIE SKpuriencB (Now po“,» 

-ri T . h .?.P bo . ve «“■» bo drlv- 
ora with clean llconaea) * 

&ECRETARY/DOOK-KEEPBR 

s f SS* l 11 p 6otnllo. sent 
S.A.E. (roolacap) to: The 
Company. Tlieatro 

SSSIffflfe Th,, T?«JrS 


mmm 

LONDON 

RE F L» N T s ION 4 PUnL *c 

u" BXl h erfni n « BV »lopment ar 

SfeKteisa aiul^E 


YORKSHIRE 

N 8STUo v 0 ^ E l «?^* 

NarthaHerron DLft 3PE. OJ ‘ ,oy ' 
— ■ 6B000Q 

UNIVERSITY OF 
EDINBURGH 

PHwrAvsijfis,^ 

«.in. tU i , . or ,n Outdoor Pur- 

"HE? 'fcVni: 

Tray* 1 ^ ted on fflwB 
data * Xa, enndi. 

for tha riitaHS. rp»P«»nanile 

mbbVXbqSS . ypBrB - 

t |«"sL°fI n 4l d “L° ,a ‘‘ ■Ppllcn- 
lWl/" tuBart «V. Bln Juno, 


ftSKia jse 5 JBCbai wk iCWr. 


nnd much vnoro in amnii 
P 2« d MBoluta aarTtJ, 

.ft n o WSfTP-: i 
VfK'izr*™ 0 ^ ' o -".'ii 1 ; 

KS*" Mlnarva Outdoorvon- 

pon CrOW R n oad ,ioU -°- Ii rfS 

To, ^h 


WEST WALES 


' JBIM 9TJ. 

Ro SVo"& c 8 




one Bctivlt'lBs 'ft 

X'art*Mnit9 or r 


S.A.E, < foolacap) to: Tha 

SS KjbE 

IUiinSi*, "* , ?s.m?' ,, " ,op S? 


aenaral acUvitiM Tn 

coir. B BO n‘25 * r “J; o,, i 1 n D IndSo 

n3™i-r.E. .. ' ol »« day i a day 

OK PorlBnco In pub- 
enriSriMR. 01 ’ WhotBVar ICBle 
oanv to fionille press 

»d be* 1 ad vs niag > M. ® n la 

twann °n O HCalu b0- 

1 2««,i " .® S " nd £6,105. 

■ h< y j J d wriia to 
*r“ aocreinry. The Aaaocla- 

J!25. 0f o. Ae S2SP“iw Tjjchpl- 


2L* RVl'TORg , 


sSiru?” 6 . 'WORLDWIDE 

mss^m. 




Charter Clinic 


SOUTH TYNESIDE 

SOUTH TYNBSlDf 11 - - 

Vocational Preparation — • 

& “I?? acsia Outd oor Education 

rS"W! a S!. Bt ,h " Authority 

CUMBRIA 

Seri. i» nl ?f r ° r nl1 v° u nfl 

Wy^AsSidiasjrBjS tut ?8^ a o tV5B oor 


BSfc:«si»^aK ©Mi 



CUMBRIA 


asaawuBsHLas 


face, 

_ Appllcailons bi 
iron, por son i with 


roni nornofig will, oxDorlonce 
n . oUuDntlnn. training and/or 


iiuiuilry. 


y.JF.?KSi lBnc 5?. mountnlnoer 
required, able to airar 
subs is nils I Bkllle la St 
leaat one athar area at 
outdoor education, prarer* 
■bjy canoeing. tAis ja a 
large Chrlatran-bsaed ra- 
aldentlal centre, In . the 
roraCront of outdoor 


wj>t ji " 


WALES 


mss 

.ppUcatlo 




lo tutor groups, communi- 
cate end lead arise lively 
are euentlel, 

- F R r f}* rth P r details, and 
appl I os l fo nfo rnj (to ba ra- 
turuad by 11th June) nend 

Ktjwaas. R 'W|& 

hsmt ulvIrsIJS; 

CUMBRIA LA 1 3 SBD , Tal 
(0448) 31758. (39288J . 

680000 


ACTIVITIES THERAPIST 

In-paBBiits end out-padenta with acuta psycWatric oiobtem* 
and alcahol and drug related difliculUes. The patlams length of 
stay is retedvaJy ahon. requiring a 
goal-orientatad approach towards ihefr treatment. 

We'arekxjJring for an OT, quail fled nurse, racreatfonal theraaiai 
or art therapist with creative practical abilities mSSmSlX 
«ia awte psychiatric field. Salary will be (n line with expS^ 
and there is an attraclhra benefits package. 

Pleasa write with career details to: Mr R. Q. Kleltiiv 

SSEEtSt? Ch,rt,r Clln,e Ch8l, “- w 

For further Information telephone 01-351 1272. 


diiions 

obinlne 

nlrouto 





ArtjrPil Jooklng 




I I _ GrifllriandGeorgeLtd.;are<X3nU^ to develop thetr involvement fn micro- 
| ' tR^r r £am S> SnC * ■ n0W re a teacher with experfence of computers to join 

I Ideallycandldateswlll have 3-4 years’teachlng experience a screnmhnH/ 1 
| . ground,and wll| have had expe^^ usIngcomSutoln t^ctodo^ 

I _ 1 situation. 

I The joMfjeh is based. In Birmingham, Involves the evatuaf fon of computer 

I software, and the preparatiqn of instrucHortal material and advertising codv- 1 

I perhaps, the most Important activity however is the Ifaison with teachers 
B authors, and consultants to bring a range of material to the market place! 5 

1 , V . A salary which reflects the Importajhoe of ihb position together with a full : 

I. range of large company benefit? will provide adequate compensation ’ ? • , 

I forthls challenging and exciting opportunity. ; ' ; v^: 

1 Telephone, orwrltafor an applicationform to: ; 

I Mrs, Georgina Watts, Griffin and George Limited, flH lllU 
I Frederick Street, Birmingham B! 3HT. : . ' . If : ■ *'• 

| Telephone: 02 1236 2552. . , * 5tiehtifk: " 














1 UK riMKS KDUC 


ational supplement mu 


i i.t} . 

il i 


•- i 

»rM? 


English as a 
Foreign Language 


ASCOT 

HEATHMEI.H HUMMER 
SCHOOL 

Emprrleucrd, lively tt?arllor<i 
preferably with EFL oximrl- 
r in r ruitulred J uly /Aii,lii*t . 
[ur riiHlclentlal trnmwi fur 
Ulrl* afioil 10 ■ 1A- IV till nil - 

non* tit ttnl-anler nimlciiiM In 
ull Hpurtn nr null I Hi' ■ liidiuil* In 
nil *|,i>rtn mill raticlnl m-« IvliL.'* 
im inn llal. 

I’ Inline ni-uil « .urrl'iiluin 
Vltnr mill iilinln lu: Tin* Hum- 
in up Hi'liinil DlriiLlnr. Iliintli- 
f in III Si'li in*l , Ani-iil. Hi'rk- 

niiiri*. m.s hiicj . cnno.vji 

7(IOUil(l 


CAMUR1DGE 

THE DULL HCIIOOl, OF 
LANOUACES 

lli-iiiilrcii rur Oiinbnr. 
1 9H2: 

1. H KL teurlior la tuiii-li 
nl rail InvDla Includltiii cam- 
bridge Prtirirloncy. K*,i<irl- 
oner eltuulil also liii-lndn 
ESP tnuclilnn. nnilfor Com- 
merrliil PiiijIIbIi friti/lilm,. 

Cluiiil riMiiiiilnrHIlun uml 
wurklim rniiriMiim* . 

A|ij*llriint» iiiiihI lluv. ■■ 
ilonrni'. it inurlilnii i-«rtlfl- 
cute mill t tin IlSA l>rl . 
TKKL or niiiilvalrnl, and 
con Aid arable b*pr>rlniif i>. 

Further do ml in and op- 

8 1 lent Inn form Irani: Run or 
Qwar, Prlnrlpul, The Ball 
SehaaL of Language*. Rail 
Cross Lana. CAMBItmaE 
CBS 2QX . Tel: (oaZ3) 


CBS BOX. Tel: 
2-173 43. Cloalna d 
ap pi Ecu t Jana : 1 l lh 
(443131 


ig date for 
11 til Junn. 
700000 



EDINBURGH/YORK 
Course Dlrociors requJrnd for 
abov« centre* from July lal. 
Excel lout rnlo paid. 

Write to Narif-Aiiitlia. 49 
Fou Laiiu, Manrheatar BO. 
138637! 700000 


KENT 

ANGLIAN SCHOOL OF 
ENGLISH 

I'oqulrrs a rull-tlma teacher of 
EFL from and uf'Juna. pan- 
Ibly noonor, until mltl- 
Beniambar. To tancli email 
multi-national claaaoe of adult 
Btudenta In nn Informal but 
prorennloiiai olmoaphere. In a 
small ml'IiuoI. Appllcaiitp must 
he qualified ur aaporJanra In 
EFL 4 prefarnbly both). Salary 
£90 — EB9 per wook. 

Wrlle With CV ililtl names 
nf two rnfrronH U) Mr. N. 

BlfAX , '.(lJrW.riSS6 , 3!.«sr 

Cl Winn villa. Murnute. ICi'ii I 


coiiiim. i.fammi 

rrqnlri'il fill' 1 7 Hi Juli l» IMIi 
A n nn si. IHAS ni riiiiutrv 
Inin nn niinr Cmilr rliiiry - I'.n * 
dulrlen hit Invltmi f mm 

rn lull till I pi With nNUul'Ielli'li »l 
T.K.I'.I.. Ill ililldri-n fur llm 
it Hi limit lal icnirm- ur up III 4(1 
I'lilldren HO — 13 yearn!. 

Sumo ti-Hi hlim pi li h imnluriil 
it iiiniiHl tillll y for the ulrls. 

I nr (iirttinr ileiiillH wrltr 
brluf 1 v tu . Inllmiiiii Nil ion I of 
I. Ull mill lies ( l*C|it CCI. Hunks 
I .line. f.'uiiierliiirv. Kent I' I 
2NII. (3RH52! 7000011 


LONDON Oniillllnd nn«t *i*- 
lirrimii ml l'.f'l, ti'iirluirn rn- 
(lillrucl nml ill May at ‘I.iiil- 
iiiinlii.* In Prill ili'n'. 2SA 
LMiiwiiri' Itunil. l.iiiiilmi. 1V'J 
I IIH. 

Ajiidy In wrltiiiu ur phuiu> 
U I - 723 I (>M2 I »l- ilnlulK. 
1443.101 7000(10 

1-0 N DON 

1 JRCi h'NTI.Y It i:<J( 1 lit C.l) 
Uiinllfl’il I*. I -J- iii-iipr anil 
eiiurtH uriliiiilnrr — it ilibinlliiL 
punt — may linrniun in-ruin* 
unit. 

Hnmll private I'lUli-nr nllti- 
iitnil mi i-du*. nf (ireiiinr 
Luiiilrin . 

hnlury £9.000 nruijilalilu — 
tu lin rcvlrwrtl In hiifitentlirr. 

Apply In wrUliiu m IIdi Nn. 
TEH 437 9, The Times WCIX 
«EZ. (392891 700000 

LONDON 

oxi om> iinnsi: cou.LCii: 

l( mi Hires m. 1 LACIIEItS l in- 
mini I iilely . i >ti|iiirtiuilllrs nr >• 
a I hii iiv.iilnblr fur lliiiwrr nlm 
would Ilka tu run i.DMI'li- 
TEIV ami (ICE rimruf'H on a 
working part nr rnli Ip ljusin. 

Apply With C.V. Hi: llxfnrd 
llouin Collonr, 103. Oxfuril 
Street. l.unUun Wl. (330301 
700000 

NOTTINGHAMSHIRE 

TRAIN TO TEACH 
ENGLISH AS A. FOREIGN 
LANGUAGE 

In 1 982 at Eaton Hall 
International Retford. 

Nottlualiun, shire . For 

tree It or a nr graduate* with 
TEFL imparlance: 34-wnok 
Intensive (earner training 
course Inndlitq to Trinity 


teachers nr graduate* with 
TEFL imparlance: 34-wnok 
Intensive tearnor training 
course Inaillnn to Trinity 
Callana Llcentlato Dlpitnna 
< LTCul. Till* cauria lakes 
a hybrid form ■ rinolniUiu nf 
30-wnnks illstuncn learning 
fallowed by a 4 -wank hlfth- 
ly Hiiennlva reslilvntlnl 
nmilulo. 

Alsu lO-vvook fnursn <6- 
weoUi dlnlanco learning 
followed by 4- wook inten- 
sive residential modulo) 
loading to the^Preiiminary 
CartirJcate In Teaching En- 
glish a* n Foreign Lan- 
guage. validated by Trinity 
College. London. 


For all ilotalts and 1BBS 
dates fur bulb courses 

R lease write lc»' The rtag. 
itrar. lief. TES3. Eaton 
nil Intcrnailoihil. Hei- 


»• lin 1 1 Internal I diiitl . Hel- 

laiiil. fori). NoiilnjihnniMlilrr nr 

iW Tn,!077T7u<i44,l ?X8i58fc 


ciVi' a¥«x . i'4 n 8V , “ t ® ’ r o 4c ( 


PROFESSIONAL 
COMMUNICATION SERVICES 

Is looking for a full-lime member of staff ko design 
and Implement ESP programmes. The applicant 
should be: 

* able to work Individually and as a member of a 
profeaslonaUeam 

* fully aware of ourrent professional trends 

* prepared to travel 

An MA In Applied Linguistics or Post Graduate 
■Certificate In TEFL Is essential. Applicants 
Should have at least four years relevant 
experience. 

Please apply In writing giving contact telephone 
number and enclosing a Curriculum Vitae with 
photograph, together .with the- names of two 
referees to: 

The Director 

Professional Communication Servtoee 
The Towers 

183 Holton Road. Barry CF6 6HP 



Gabbitas-Thrlng 


OLDHAM 

Mh rlllll’lll.l I'AN 
id i in it ■(■ K nr ni.miAM 

INllllhTIllAI. I ANIil'Alil- 

TIlAININli (INI I 
tilillimu 

U X l-Hi inrnr I 

[-lin Iniluxii'UU I.aii>iiiiiiir 
TrnLiilnu Harvlrr l» » 
nniliiii.il hi lii'ini 1 wlili-li pru- 
ililri liinmiiui" nml iimii- 
inuilUalliiii^ irulnhi'i ill 
work for iiiMHilii vvliiisu' 
llrrat MiimiAU" ii mil In- 
■ill-.li nml rnlali-il ir.iliuna 
fur iiutlN r raiM'ahnrn wlm 
work In fiiii((l-riii (ul «'«• 

v Irimiiiriit n. I'll.* Nervin' |i 
flnaniTil bv (hr Mnniiiivvi-r 
,Si>rx li i'll l 'uni in li* ion nml 
admin lUrr ml llirmnih (In- 
l iir.il I d ui'n I Inn Aiillior- 
Kli'H Hip Olillnliii Hull linn 
mi in it. Ii-h Inr li l.'-i luri r" 
lirllilr I I Niilui'V : l. , i.(l34- 
OI.ii.1Hi r r mu Hppl pnilir r 
I'lH'J ur ■-•ii liar If iiii-.-iilili>. 

k-.aiii'i li- in n mill 'hi iiii.il- 
if Li-iiI Inn-* In tiMi'liliin Fie 
nllsli n% n mu nml l.niiiiiiiiiii' 
won Id be nn lulvmitailP ii% 
wiMilil n mirrlciii i- ul wurk- 
lioi with pIIiiiIi- mliiurliv 
■ in uni mi 1 1 1 m. kiiowli-ili|ii ul 
nn Aralnil liiiiiiiimip. ur 111 - 
iluvirlnl work as|iprlriu''i- 

ll.T milt* wmk in pruni- 
iitr niiiiul uiiiiiiriiiulllp*. 
All npiiliuiiiM fur (III* fiuit 
will bn «'u ns Ida mi I uii 
mnrlt rrianrilliiss uf riu'ti. 
spx nr rrant. 

I'liriliiti- purdi ul.irn mill 
niililli nt tun fiirm* fnuti: 
nirri tor uf i:ihii'iiihui I mil 

Town Ifni I . Mlilillcliill 
Itiiiiil. 4.liniMr>rluii. Old- 
llniii. LH.'I fil'l*. Itfl : All/ 

IK. 

Ctuslnn ilutn -2Rih Muy. 
19Ma. <353241 700000 

SUMMER POSTS 


High quality staff (ouch 
English, aupcrvlno sports, 
oacurslons. Cnursns over- 
saaa children 6- IB private 
adioois South East. Only 
nuuliriocl oradumta teachers 
(SDcondary/prlmBry). with 


EFL qual./asp., prof, nvar 
23 with clean llconco, love 
ctilldron. hard wurk In 


liaautlful centra*. Skllln ull 
klmln nncdeil. All staff ra- 
Bldonltul. Vurluus starling 
dates from mid-end July 
for 3 a 4 ur 0 week 

E orlndn. t!2U n week plus 
oord and knap. A lul «if 
fun: » great experience. 

Apply now full c.v. lurnn 
s.n.o.. plvluu (iventnn tele- 
nhonn number. Intnrvluw* 
London, j. M. N.Hur- 

KESfe. 

<Vo4 d 82) ^ anterbl>ry ' 7 K 0 «ft« 6 

^Bft 0 TU 0 R%fl? D ^R?R E 

plplome Course* m Music 
Iharanliy In co-opera I ion with 
Tile City tlnlvcraltv 
Olio -year, full tlinn roursa 
rumimim-tna Nnniembor. 1 982 
fur iu-i*ro*slunnl iiiuslclnns 
mill tear l mra with a rocuii- 
ill veil illpliiniii ur dnflrim in 
miiHlr and some iixfu-rlnitcp 
wl ill liamUmpneU i'lilldren. 
The Centre also uriluillNns 
Hhiirt i- nurses. Vlsium air 
wn i umn tu nbiQrvo llie work. 


■mart i-nursos- Vlsium nrr 
wnlromn to nbsarvo llie work. 

F.nuulrlra iu: Tile fllreotur. 
Tlio Noi-ilun-nobliloM Music 


& m wm 

miilreU July uiul Au- 
tancli BNGLlall in 

r clioul children end 
a. In acklvlllos/oxriir* 
_ during itudy liuliilays 
Rucks -- llavun, „1 .miix. 
Her .. London. Hants.. 
Kant, Surrey, nml 


1 'lgnsa apply on a 
n far alien TM 

"* Tf IficVim and, 7 


Undarurpdunto 
work ahroau- 





WEST SUSSEX 

!fi e 

( iti 
at 




Education Courses 


CltOYimN 


Ol'.u.ll II |l ANP 
I M*l itll.Ni I li 
1 1 ACIII 1(1 

llniiilrr'l lin %<i>-tl|uii 
i •iiii'h** In l-iiiiiluii.'--iiri pi •' 
sunn lliilli. f.l. I- I I n- 
ill ■ -ill lii-iii ci- nrr 1 1 - r i cl 

l*lr<i*r im'II i' nli inn mil 
ilrlull* 1 1 ■ I mm 

Al'AllV.M V 77.1 I.pi'IUP 
NIl'tTl. rriniliiM. mii'i'i 
CKO ll.1i. i 4 | 7 | fnoillltl 


t’UOYlHJN 


MUMMI.II m III ll i| 
niciiM. mm. I" i oil- 

ru mil* 

llr'inlri'il I ur lii-nlil.'iiiliil 
l .■|iiii'"i'-> III | iiiuli.it' 

.sunn, ilurluu [ill v mill 

Aiiiiini ri-iu bi'i* in ■ iii i ii ii 
■li'ili it/ I'i'iii hni * ■ 1 - 11111 . 

i etc. iiri'fi-i'iilili in |.imli«li 
wlili iiimil f I .1 I i-xiu-rl' 
phi mill iirPimi piI In ii.ii- 
I li Ipilla- full v lin i ■lliilli mi 
III in in- . 

I'limve write ul vl mi full 
ilpiull* In- II MU l 

ACAIU'-MY t. I'll. I fii 
1 'iruriie Mrr«i. I rutiliiii 
CHO 111). (423lru 7001100 


l.KAltN TO TEACH 
ENGLISH (EFL) 

1 1 it If Term nml Hiinini«*r 


Mill- Wlirk IT-ilileilllnl 
■ unrip* m Kent I fill vn ill y/ 
f *il ii Inrlillr V . 

Thu Ciiurne Oil In 11 vr 
'To (live yiiu a preiili-nl 
nml liuinnnili Inirinliii lion 
tu the Teaching u( 1'. nullah 
ns a Forelnn I.niinituui' In 
one week.' 


From 

V.A.T. 


p.w. Ini . 


Pilgrims Training Course*, 
Tina Essex, 8 Vermin 
Plaro, Canterbury, Kent. 
CT1 JVa. (9227-^9127/8/ 
9). (424931 760000 


LONDON 

the NoiiuoFF-iinniiiNN 
MUSIC TIIF.ll A PY CENTRE 
MUSIC FOR THE HKARING 
IMI'AIIIF-I) 

CAROL A CI.1VI'. lUIRUINK 
A Oun May Cnurne nt Rurnh 
Huusa. New End Hnmifr 


llnnipsteud N.W.3. 


UNIVERSITY SUMMER 
CnUHHKH 

in iim min. 

1 A M llll 1 1 li • I AN II ^'llllli 
UNI VI ll'.l I > I III l.| 1,1 s 

lull J'M * '.link pi|i r.n r 

■ I ll. I III'* lllil,il>l" ,11 IIpiI- 

f « • ■ ■ 1 1 iiIIpiI". ■■ilni.l 

lull iM Aiiii fi “M.iilrin 
I n-illili Nt.irl nml I'uptiv" 

HI M n 'i.1 n l run ■ <>||p,ip. 

■ ■■ ill I* ■ 1 ■ I ■ I 

Mui 7-.h) ' Vli tor Inn 

I lin Him nll.l ill- in-, 
i >M i "I Vi'rk " ill Dip I'iii- 

lPI*(tl Of Vi'lk 

All mi-* ii-li •mil' - |i'm 
I .I'm 

ISillr i lip|i« | i | A 

V% III' liiil'M'r Mi lip, I il in - 

In Idue. I II J J I W inr 

l.l.r.lip ll.l.H II -1 II 111^1 

I % He Ml I ff'IMinil 

WOUCKSIKII 


Wl Ull I ■> I I It « III 1 I l.t. 
<<l Mir a ill it i nut \i n in 

M VI N I It ANNUAL 
11 'MM I II '.I'tlllMI I'iH'.t 

23i ■! Ini* — f. til Aii'iml 

I nl i-nsl vi- *lni| | ■ iiiii ip, 

■ uirilinl il iiiii- i n i tin- of 

anlifpi 1 m “.Vi .IN' I, r Inn 
Iip lit dui Inn | Iip nliuip 
|ir i lull 

l|p*lilrill Ini n> ■ "iiiiii. K in- 

Hull I* ■»% nllalilr >il IIip 

I idieup 

I ur luiitipr Ini ur mil Inn 
I'lrnsp wriip in Hip Inin 
inr ul ninniiiPi i< lunil. 

Wnripiirr CiillPur <■> liliili- 
rr EiIiii'.iIIiiii . |l rim iik 

tirm p. Wiiri r*lri IV 112 

ft A 1 . 1 Pi IO*IU:i I >l2>HtHll. 

l3H4 7.1l IMIlXin 


111 l'1.( IMA COURM-.S Mill 
Tt'.ACIIEHS 

tin- lllpliimii in l•^ll(l-«*lllllul 
Stinlli-s In l.ilni'alliiii tirnvnlu* 
tlio linsi* for 1 1* u ■ her* III 
Primary mid Nn inulnrv 
M'lniuls tu i-aipiul llielr pru- 
fessliniul "kill* in *|ipi-irii 
wren* ctf iruihiim. 

The Ciil|pi|p uffer* iwii-iner 
imrl-llliie i inirin* in . Tln- 
Ti'ill IlillU uf llritillini. 

Temlilnu of Mnilieiiietii's in 
■ lie Prliiiiirv SiIimi.I I p.irninu 
Tuff I' It |r% . I'li v *ii n I I'iIim nl Inn 
in llie Prlniiin Si Innil 

Fur lllrr deliill* I nml Avriy 
III II Cnllnne. Hr* lev Hi mil. 

' ■*' HM /fthH0U 


W 2. 01 -402 tlaTS.^lSSoOQ)®* 1 

160000 

llie Innderi rj?"!?' 11 ** (*■ 

v'.r u « 

Fdiiinilnii. Count M l H r 01 

W. |vi 

h'liire 7th i.r— ® y .WOO 

' vm ”‘ Jo “' ,a 


Personal 

Announcemantt 

TEACHERS WANTED 

MATHEMATICS, Englth. tkotM 
Ri».leu. ChbASjnWSft 
G«rman Toachiq me nomd i> 

mcu-aiot, lor 

artrung ondwwwfc'Onii'iwikajBy 

vi'» nnon m mo tatanAw n* 
London (Oraain). BtnS. BuJ*. 

atfos 

Tine ind Weir, w2m iSootTw' 
MXiundl. W Yorks. 

For (Mails Mod name inti obiu 
only lo 

Poraonal Tutor* (Dm T.Ltl a 
Finland Road, Omy, Ctxadi, 
ChaiNra BKB 4QA. 


Selling your booM? 

Letting your collage? 

Exchanging your home? 

For a* mile as 13.10 (S 
lines! you ran Blurs vour 
nriibleina with 600,000 raid- 
ers nf till* pnper. 

Cell Mery McOylnnau lor 
■ Iplnll* nn 01-837 ■ 1234 a- 
• ril*ilill 7740. 800000 


l>nl nil* fruin: The Krrrel- 
ary . The Nnrdufr-Kuhblii* 
Music Therapy Centre. 3 
Lnlohtnn Pturn, t.inidon NW3 


rviLiuic I nornpy 1 . 1 'nii'n. j i.nunn. .liuii 

Lnlohtnn Plttre, I.unilnn NW.9 One- Week (.'■ 

aqL. Tol; 01 UA7 6211ft. Augusl. C2i 

139036) 7AB0OU Kriislinituu. 

— — 274 3811 i 


ft vdtaiiM/-* Week-) nil fti llii'i 
Cuiir*n. .limp 3 lli/ft III L 1 H . 
One- Week (.'niiripn July mill 
Autiusl. C2H. Thrill re III 
KpiisIihiIuii. hvllnlum. lei 
274 3911 inru-r 4 ii.m. i 

1388781 7601)00 


Cl .000.00 CONVIBBION U 
yuiir* If. e.ii- you land our 
Si hind Insl 2 p roups or 11 
EFL MuUonlB for a 4 wilt 


Commission 


*iiinil«r nraup* peyabla pir 
■ iiuiinl. Contact: ITS Enollih 
M'lunil. 44 CambrldqB Git- 
den*. Ilavllnui, Tel: 43803! 
or 719971. (44099) 800000 


MANCHESTER 


inyn&! 

nliaeii 

Surrey. 


T.E.F.L. COlJflBLW 
Noril-Anplln T.B.F.I.. ruurtn 
for t earner* and others In- 
terested In the field. 

Our aperlal summer five- 
iluv lute halve course begins un 
.lunn 1 4 . Heal dent I n | urruiti* 
niniliitliiii uvmiable nl n uni 
of E3.1.00. 

Write Nuril-Aniilln liilernu- 

BKT.hWrVfV.'ii.'ir/S.BII 

MANCHESTER 

A 

a na weak intensive TKIT. 

asses (.lime 14 - loi hi Mbii- 
riinstnr Coat US. Kcshlrnllnl 
VU board ariruminudiilluii nl 
C39 extra. 

.Tim ruurna I* ■ nm erned 
With the prat-lira 1 1 tin* uf 
1P.FL and la uuen In Uutli new 
and expo r I finriul > nor lie r*. 

Wrlln tu llnvli) liter'll nit v . 
Nurd Anglin Ininriiutlmiul. 49 
Fun Lunn. Illtlsliilrv. Mill!, 
c-heslor MilO Cl All. (48121) 

TAauiiO 


MiiiiUnv 13 


RETRAIN AS A SCIENCE 
OR MATHEMATICS 
TEACHER 

There Is aim a nhorlngo of teachers ol malhematics and 
physlcol and integrated science lor 1ft- 18 plus age range. 
The Government is continuing lo finance a «P 0C [® f 
scheme and the coursnn ol ino Wosl Sussex InsUlule naw 
boen opprovod hy Ihu Doporlmonl of Educailon and science. 

You could bo oJlgibJo if you hovo: 

a. qualified leocner staiuu , , nt 

b. suitable basic qualificallonn In a pliyslcel science or in 
malhemallcs 

0. interest, enlhuslaom nnd aptitude. 

1 . II you nro a smvlug loochor amployod by anLE ^ y^^ 

be seconded on full salary. Tho aalery will bo W 

your L.E.A. by lho Local Governmonl Tra nlrvg Board. 

2. I! you uro nn oxporlnncud unemployed loacter ovo 

Umro Is u lox-froo muinlononco nltoworice^ ^Theje 
addlllonnl nllownncun for dopondonts. lodging or trave 
aomo oqulpnmnl. h ri on(v 

3. Newly nunHlluil unompjoyod Mehon who hiwohwonj 
Ihreo yonra* granl are oligiblo for n fourth yoor. This may 
unod for ihn roiniinino courso. 

Resldonunl accommodalJon oould be aveilablo H rGqu , | ® a ' 

For further deteHs end idKiiutooi 

Admlatlonu Office, Room 051, JMI ‘HJ 
Higher Educailon, Tho Dome, Uppor Bognor Road, aogrw 


fV Wcsl Sussex Institute 
;*% off ^1 teller Education 

rvrv 


BUDGET 

LOANS 


l^feresfl 

EflafesJ 


Tgg^C^DON MaNTEHSORI 
M6ntefl*0rf Toachnra 

Ml 


700000 


HF8 change aeoured budget loans for 

You can repay over 3-15 years and free ,if ® g% 7 per 

Included to prelect your family, inleresl la 

monlK APR 28.3, example £3.00) for J reduced 

monlhW, toud emounl payable £6,053.80 which wii 

on early settlement. kacdnlad^- 

No time tonsumlng Interviews nor will empfoyefe ^ 9tWV 
Speedy and conflrfenUal poalal service lor earliest cor^*' 
For.your epplloailon form and written details of our mama s 
phone or wrlle lo; 

HOMEOWNERS FINANCIAL SE^P^ / : 
Barclays Bank Chambsrs . 

St Qllea Square, Northampton NN1 
Telephone (0604) 34141 


i 


THE TIMES EDUCATIONAL SUPPLEMENT 21.5.82 


PERSONAL 

coodnuBd 


Praclfse Your Languages 

Bgyfflfti temfy in Franco, Qormanyor 
ton. paying guest stay s and 
arranged. Gram erne lakcn 
^ Of famiiias. Also pormlemp 
jljuK MM m Franco and Spain. 
Contact: Mra Rutter, 

Hot A avail Sarvlct, 

M, KMI Road, London BW8 2DX. 
Wi 01*731 6340. 


iaSS M0RTQAGBB liip.iim, 
n-nortinn* liiniiniiinli'li' 

Vyitlabia. Norllinrn I'.iiiiiilos 
imurince Aanm v. I ri-i-iiiiHi , 
Kjrltfi. Cumbria. lal. i) 7 fill 
U| 17 (24 hour nai-vli'f). 
■' ii(064) hi, mum 


A TIACHIR'8 COMPANION 
U, Report WrllliHi. 3rd u,i- 
preulon. FI 111 I mi anumnrl. 
ue commom in • hut .mv 
.Mid for inuuv siilili-i i* 
inono 700 in TKir.fiCits. 
11.30 Fraen„*i MuliKiiini-. 
Kint ME 1 6 a 1114 . <4427 1 1 

Hfuimm 


HOIIMVI AND PERSONAL 
.LOANl Tram Cl 00 iii'rmiuiid 
HhAout ancurlly ur ilclui. 
Cinpell A Roblanii [.HI. 107 
IMiin sirecl. Loiulun. HWI 
MW. Wrlla. plmno ur mil 
lor written Irrini. Tido- 
phone 01*839 3935. 

(00174} BUOOOO 


JOB HU NT IN 07 Sc.klni, 

PfomailanJ. Fratlbiil 
dinco an all a*iu>i'is - wrli- 
i«8 own 1 urrli ulum 

MU® IWlfh sample 1 vi); up. 

plkotlon-form* anil lni<|. rn . 
taorvlaw _ prnmiu 1 1 1 >„ 1 

[ ,W"( llknlv •im-Nl Iiiiih I > 

SLffl!KS /pr J vnl,,, ' *s-7fl 

D, * ,, Nn. T i.*i 
Timm Wr.'IX HI./ 
Htiitiuni 


HMT0AGI8 Top-Un*' rt» 
"Oil mi*. 

Sr«5 "«RJ!Sr t Lid l . lrr i n : 

jjjporatail Muriqann Hrok- 

hour ■niweriiiui. IU 0 l 7 fti <J4 
Honnon 


"SJTOA 0 M* “O to 100 -i 3 V« 
■Mo* Ronnirlipnii'* at 

u 14 (ini.iwv 

hi a«Jir y fia ,1‘om-tcwn « I - 
uiawi. (3i7«ni omuinii 


"60QDQ 


?SSj ,eta c 


PROMOTION iii r 

•'■•iiipliii,, to °china. a 

*^ris 

Jrir 55^5 

-L m <' 

HSKiifT*™- nte'-'s; ^riss-C'vfSi p s; n : 

MSW,-'- Son: £8^1 ■■Ywr> fcrfe "BSaa 

TS46. (aafiTg. T*l: OJ -38S 

... . — _ - 860000 

;>r .(Pr" -w 

«ipporiunli» n career condition Cs^on*' 

public cilinu* l ,y' in' * major 892 6913 txnil*?- Tal « 01 - 

860000 

800000 {L"0 easy to u«e iTIP rh * ni 1 vo 

— »L 


wRAiL 


Kwl :Vr T .B; ? 

J^LfSaord, TaJ; ^ 6 gjg 

KSfss 

Jg36£ S>«iCSE3B: 


.J-100 Aujuu a t i 8 0 a 0 th July 

l floo °o A“bft , .SSi p ay ( i 


, 0 ?®,°- F °r a oonferencoif 0 T V bu*i n **j 

m ste„ «n l-d . £a P8 ln ^ B<n "At 


Exhibitions 


Bu 


9'jVwil S| L|B VVC) RY A n-r ro “ l 
Tin. niiiiK ijj iLv.ART of 

Hm.* A,, ^^L6 w n-r- 10-y! 

n .*..d 3rd M«V. (4307lj rBa ' 
840000 

and Wanted 


V.w LTM ~~ - • BBOOOfj 

__ arfoTfiid *aude BLI ^ K c holidays. 

Vil ® . IIH: 

Craft Inn L T 30n n.n 19B2. V-...., Can Afford. 


holidays activ *ty 

ln 1,10 Wo,,,h 

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*plete the cou[x>n on this I Address. 


h> me every Friday iindl further ripBce. 


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